Unbelievable Noise Cancellation Experiment

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  • čas přidán 4. 04. 2020
  • In this video I show you how noise cancellation works and give you a real life example that you can experiment with on your own!
    Credit to myurgil for inspiring the ideas in this video many years earlier:
    • Noise Cancelling Heaph...
    Checkout my experiment book: amzn.to/2Wf07x1
    Follow me on Twitter: / theactionlabman
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    *Any experiment you try is at YOUR OWN RISK. The Action Lab assumes no responsibility for any injury if you attempt anything you see in this video or on The Action Lab channel.
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Komentáře • 1K

  • @TheActionLab
    @TheActionLab  Před 4 lety +747

    Hi everyone! The experiment clip starts at 4:34

  • @curiosity_saved_the_cat
    @curiosity_saved_the_cat Před 4 lety +1146

    This must bee why I have trouble making decisions sometimes, my left hemisphere cancels out my right hemisphere and I end up taking a nap.

  • @jpe1
    @jpe1 Před 4 lety +424

    Every time he says “audio file” I hear “audiophile.”

    • @padkirsch
      @padkirsch Před 4 lety +16

      You must love FLAC files! ✅💟👍🎶

    • @kenshiromilesvt.7037
      @kenshiromilesvt.7037 Před 4 lety +3

      padkirsch wav is still better haha

    • @padkirsch
      @padkirsch Před 4 lety +3

      @@kenshiromilesvt.7037 interesting perspective. Care to expand on that? I'd like to know your perspective on that. Why do you think it's better? In what way? Audio quality, file size, accessibility. I would really like to know?

    • @kenshiromilesvt.7037
      @kenshiromilesvt.7037 Před 4 lety +6

      padkirsch dont get me wrong FLAC is good. Its just not as wide spread as wav and wav work on more platforms. The quality is actually better because it doesn’t compress anything whereas FLAC does compress somethings, but it takes a really good ear to tell the difference (I can tell the difference, I’m lucky to be blessed with those ears haha, as I am sure you are too. Its file size is bigger, but if you need small files, convert to highest bitrate AAC with Audacity, the difference is almost unnoticeable actually, and the file size is pretty small too.

    • @moicanostrondass
      @moicanostrondass Před 4 lety +3

      @@kenshiromilesvt.7037 i aways convert into AAC i don't know why

  • @inuka6969
    @inuka6969 Před 4 lety +1250

    Fun Fact :
    If you delete your audio file, you can't hear anything.

  • @lonzodaman
    @lonzodaman Před 4 lety +179

    I discovered this noise cancelling effect about 35 years ago when I accidentally connected half of my speakers with reversed polarity to my car stereo. The sound didn't disappear completely but was very "thin". Should have claimed a patent for this. ;)

    • @DevinSnuckel
      @DevinSnuckel Před 4 lety

      Demn

    • @zonk9343
      @zonk9343 Před 4 lety +26

      Lonzo Apparently a man named Dr. Lawrence Jerome Fogel submitted patents about active noise cancellation in the 1950’s. Sorry man ;-;

    • @ayahuascagaming9399
      @ayahuascagaming9399 Před 2 lety +11

      This is the equivalent of i discovered something new but it's already been discovered

    • @billi706
      @billi706 Před 2 lety

      You mean pondered upon?

    • @anandsuralkar2947
      @anandsuralkar2947 Před 2 lety

      @@ayahuascagaming9399 except it probably wasn't 36years ago i guess

  • @CoolDudeClem
    @CoolDudeClem Před 4 lety +399

    Wish I could do this to my neighbors music!

    • @DCRhythms
      @DCRhythms Před 4 lety +6

      Same here!!!

    • @SToXC_.
      @SToXC_. Před 4 lety +96

      actually you can lol, active noise cancelling headphones, they have a microphone, it just inverts waves of everything reaching it and sending it to yout ears immediately, so you hear nothing

    • @gulagwarlord
      @gulagwarlord Před 4 lety +41

      You CAN! You just need a fast enough circuit to record/flip phase and play it back at them!!!

    • @voidex136
      @voidex136 Před 4 lety +80

      Shotgun will do the job.

    • @jhonx1420
      @jhonx1420 Před 4 lety +3

      If you cant stop, you can join

  • @AlvinCwk
    @AlvinCwk Před 4 lety +180

    so can I copyright claim other people's silences in their videos for using my digital audio cancelation sample?

    • @LeprechaunJackson
      @LeprechaunJackson Před 4 lety +12

      … 200 IQ! 🤣

    • @jimmysyar889
      @jimmysyar889 Před 4 lety +1

      Real question tho

    • @Hyzt-
      @Hyzt- Před 4 lety

      Sadly, thats not how the copyrighted music recognition works

    • @LeprechaunJackson
      @LeprechaunJackson Před 4 lety +2

      Hyzt aww c’mon no need to be a buzzkill lmao it’s only a joke 🤣

    •  Před 4 lety

      @@Hyzt- Might just be. It would explain a lot!

  • @nikhedoniac
    @nikhedoniac Před 4 lety +30

    5:00 - That external hard-drive, perched perilously at the edge of table, is stressing me out!

    • @coolguy284_2
      @coolguy284_2 Před 4 lety +1

      I'm pretty sure that's a modem, not a hard drive. (You're referring to the thing with blue lights on the left side of the table, right?)

    • @nikhedoniac
      @nikhedoniac Před 4 lety

      @@coolguy284_2 Yeah, perhaps it's a modem. Either way! :)

    • @coolguy284_2
      @coolguy284_2 Před 4 lety +1

      @@nikhedoniac It's just less of an emotionally scarring event if the modem drops than if a hard disk drive drops.

  • @dmdplayz
    @dmdplayz Před 4 lety +51

    0:00 Lol I swear I thought I heard you saying that in a very tiny voice in my head, but i realized i just read it in ur voice after I put the speaker close to my ears.

    • @rgerber
      @rgerber Před 4 lety +2

      Same I could swear that I heard his voice little bit

    • @gamer_222
      @gamer_222 Před 4 lety +1

      Same

    • @Zanthron
      @Zanthron Před 4 lety +1

      its your brain making up for it becuase it can read the subtitles and basically say them in your head

    • @dmdplayz
      @dmdplayz Před 4 lety

      @@Zanthron The weird part is I didn't have subtitles on at all lol. I guess it's just because I'm used to hearing him so much when he opens his mouth 😂

  • @UnreadRez
    @UnreadRez Před 4 lety +130

    Cool lol i was about to turn the volume 😂

    • @eggdogispog
      @eggdogispog Před 4 lety

      me too

    • @sprite4492
      @sprite4492 Před 3 lety

      @@tthung8668 LMAO i did the opposite of what you did i turned my volume down😂

  • @himsim9425
    @himsim9425 Před 4 lety +174

    See you in 5 years when this will be recommended yet again

    • @ritutiwari9716
      @ritutiwari9716 Před 4 lety +2

      Unoriginal

    • @jamesbizs
      @jamesbizs Před 4 lety +2

      This joke hasn’t been made on every single popular video ever. Nope. Definitely not

    • @realcygnus
      @realcygnus Před 4 lety +4

      God forbid you might be interested in actually learning some things about reality as opposed to just watching piano kitty for the millionth time or whatever else sort of nonsensical things you do on here.

    • @gamer_222
      @gamer_222 Před 4 lety +1

      It's recommend in 5 hours

    • @constent5394
      @constent5394 Před 4 lety

      See you then!

  • @DCTGoddess
    @DCTGoddess Před 4 lety +24

    I discovered, accidentally when I was having a problem with a headphone jack, if I positioned it the right way I could hear the music in both channels with some parts of the mix phased out. Depending on how a song was mixed, and where instrumentation and vocals were placed in the stereo image, i ended up with stripped-down versions, or karaoke quality songs. I could hear edit points, and riffs that normally would be buried in the mix. I started trying it in Audacity, and ended up with a really interesting play list!

  • @brettcameratraveler
    @brettcameratraveler Před 4 lety +20

    This works pretty well in a open area with two ultrasonic speakers as well. You might love experimenting with US speakers. They are hyper directional and give the listener the feeling like someone is talking in their head. You can also turn air into haptic shapes, levitate things, etc

  • @RobertEnterprises
    @RobertEnterprises Před 4 lety +6

    I love that you come up with simple and yet so interesting concepts and experiments for a video. This makes you learn about the topic at hand much easier, because you can visually, or in this case audibly hear the difference and do some experimenting on your own. Fantastic job as always :)

  • @anizan1004
    @anizan1004 Před 4 lety +69

    I am a music producer and knowing about noise cancellation beforehand made me feel smart

    • @jamesbizs
      @jamesbizs Před 4 lety +5

      Anizan lol. Beforehead. So smart

    • @zt3853
      @zt3853 Před 4 lety

      j p hahahahaha

    • @anizan1004
      @anizan1004 Před 4 lety +3

      @@jamesbizs woopsie. I'm not native so accidentally made a mistake

    • @ABaumstumpf
      @ABaumstumpf Před 4 lety +1

      Calling it noise-cancelation is wrong in this regards - there was no "noise" to begin with, only the original sound, and then he set that to 0.

    • @arsridi6096
      @arsridi6096 Před 4 lety

      Watching a video like this weeks ago made me feel smart

  • @biggusmunkusthegreat
    @biggusmunkusthegreat Před 4 lety +16

    I compose music on a DAW. It's kind of fun to go back and invert previous versions of tracks to hear the difference in what I've added/removed put together. I do this from time to time :)

    • @DrMarlowski
      @DrMarlowski Před rokem +4

      Dude that's really smart. Never thought of using it that way 😃

  • @Anklejbiter
    @Anklejbiter Před 4 lety +83

    I just recently had to deal with something similar, I needed two left and right tracks to be different for something so i just copy and pasted the mono track and inverted it. Sounded fine to me, but when i tried showing it to someone over a speaker it wasn't there anymore.

    • @mrkitty777
      @mrkitty777 Před 4 lety +3

      It's a criminal offence to not let government hear you. Penalty is exceptional.

    • @coolmonkey619
      @coolmonkey619 Před 4 lety

      What was the solution

    • @Anklejbiter
      @Anklejbiter Před 4 lety +3

      @@coolmonkey619 i uninverted it and aded a delay of about 0.0003 seconds.

    • @Anklejbiter
      @Anklejbiter Před 4 lety

      @@mrkitty777 is this a reference to something that I don't get?

    • @Starkl3t
      @Starkl3t Před 4 lety

      What was the point of inverting it...?

  • @nyancat7486
    @nyancat7486 Před 4 lety +249

    Deaf : Drake disapproves
    Noise Cancelling™ : Drake approves

  • @puspamadak
    @puspamadak Před 4 lety +13

    I had also done this experiment while learning about waves in class 11. It was really interesting.
    But your idea of doing this with an audio file was just amazing.

    • @infinix2003
      @infinix2003 Před 4 lety

      even i did it in 11th while learning waves

  • @vicnie1
    @vicnie1 Před 4 lety +8

    People with mono audio: is this a prank?

  • @alles_banane_4033
    @alles_banane_4033 Před 4 lety +24

    There’s something I always wondered if it would work: when the stepper motors of a 3D printer move, they create a characteristic sound depending on the speed I think. Thats why there are videos on CZcams where whole songs just with stepper motors are created. I always wondered if it is possible to cancel most of the sound of the stepper with inverted sounds playing. Theoretically you can create the inverted sound file before even starting the print, because you know every movement of the printer from its print file (gcode). Also the loudest noise of the stepper Motors aren’t like random sounds but real notes with more or less constant waves I think

    • @fernandogajo8800
      @fernandogajo8800 Před 4 lety +7

      You must have heard of headphones with noise cancelation technology. They use this principle.
      But
      I think it can't work very well in a room, where sound is diffused around. There would be points where the noise is canceled, but the waves go through each other, and as they bounce the walls and other irregular surfaces of the room (the people in it, included) the scattering would create zones with CONSTRUCTIVE interference, rather then Destructive interference, cause the opposite result of the one desired.

    • @alles_banane_4033
      @alles_banane_4033 Před 4 lety +3

      @@fernandogajo8800 Makes sense. Thank you!

    • @Nevir202
      @Nevir202 Před rokem +1

      @@fernandogajo8800 Would work pretty well by just attaching the speakers directly to the motors they are canceling, as he was saying, having both sound sources as close to on top of one another as possible makes for pretty effective cancelation

    • @fernandogajo8800
      @fernandogajo8800 Před rokem +1

      @@Nevir202 interesting idea

  • @dr_nyt4041
    @dr_nyt4041 Před 4 lety +12

    What I find shocking is how you can work on a table that small 6:56

  • @anindabanerjee1136
    @anindabanerjee1136 Před 4 lety +3

    Great Man Following you since 5k subs 😍

  • @LucasTheBot
    @LucasTheBot Před 4 lety

    I'm loving these last few videos!

  • @atsuchiya624
    @atsuchiya624 Před 4 lety +66

    Is it just me or does the inverted sound clip sound “feel” different to anyone else In your ears?

    • @zazonf1832
      @zazonf1832 Před 4 lety +6

      It’s just you i think

    • @tarun.starboy
      @tarun.starboy Před 4 lety +1

      It feels normal to me

    • @5hape5hift3r
      @5hape5hift3r Před 4 lety

      Yes

    • @5hape5hift3r
      @5hape5hift3r Před 4 lety +6

      a p sound sends out a compressive wave
      But if you invert that sound you get a decompressive wave
      sound of pushing out vs pulling away

    • @erwinmulder1338
      @erwinmulder1338 Před 4 lety +2

      It feels different for me too.

  • @MeHighLo
    @MeHighLo Před 4 lety +4

    That was cool. I listened to it with small stereo speakers, and it was exactly as you said. And putting them right against each other almost muted the sound. As I once said, you are the one and only "science troller extraordinaire".

  • @TheObieOne
    @TheObieOne Před 4 lety

    Never stop doing stuff like this! Always amazed by the things you teach us!

  • @inhumer
    @inhumer Před 4 lety +2

    I really appreciate your enthusiasm and clarity in explaining often complex science in an engaging and thought provoking manner. Thank you.

  • @SopanKotbagi
    @SopanKotbagi Před 4 lety +3

    I used to play around with my headphones doing these noise-cancelling experiments in my school after learning about the double-slit experiment one day. Good times...

  • @NewbyTon
    @NewbyTon Před 4 lety +11

    Tip: if you want to mute audio in a track in a video editor, just delete parts of the audio track that you want to be muted instead of adding a negative sound track

  • @xzero6850
    @xzero6850 Před 3 lety

    I seriously love this channel. I actually learn really cool stuff.

  • @Leandro-vy7nj
    @Leandro-vy7nj Před 4 lety

    This is great! Thumbs up for the home-experiment.

  • @god5926
    @god5926 Před 4 lety +7

    Legit, I first learned this in talking Tom and friends on Netflix, I thought it was fake, but now, I know it’s not. And that’s cool

  • @destroyishere4655
    @destroyishere4655 Před 4 lety +3

    For some reason I actually heard you in my head during the start of the video. This was probably because whenever your video starts you always say the phrase "Hey everyone". Also reading the captions probably reassured my brain that you were actually saying that. But after the phrase I noticed that something wasn't right.

  • @hgfuhgvg
    @hgfuhgvg Před 4 lety +1

    you make everything seem so easy. I wish I had seen your videos when I was younger and had access to my school lab.

  • @id104335409
    @id104335409 Před 4 lety +1

    If your next video has a thumbnail with two speakers and a mellon sitting between them - IM NOT WATCHING THAT VIDEO!

  • @aabsc
    @aabsc Před 4 lety +5

    4:34 On my 5.1 surround sound system this part actually comes out of the rear speakers only, it's very rare for sound to come only from the rear. I just put my receiver in stereo mode and it just sounds really weird, it's hard to explain, almost like an echo but not an echo.

    • @ZFanz
      @ZFanz Před 4 lety +1

      Yes same. Like its coming out from inside of your skull

  • @anonymousmafia3197
    @anonymousmafia3197 Před 4 lety +3

    Him : *Don't adjust your volume*
    Me : *Why do I listen to him?*

  • @johnt.inscrutable1545
    @johnt.inscrutable1545 Před 4 lety

    Totally fun video! Thank you!

  • @kaifali4691
    @kaifali4691 Před 4 lety

    Wow this is really incredible!! I love your videos sm, keep at it man 💙💙

  • @PhantasmXYZ
    @PhantasmXYZ Před 4 lety +11

    This reminds me I once had a defective MP3 player that had inverted polarity on the right audio channel. The bass and other centered sounds on stereo music were weak; it was horrible to listen to. The seller denied the issue existed and refused refund or repair. 😠

    • @PhantasmXYZ
      @PhantasmXYZ Před 4 lety +3

      Oh, and the seller and some even tried to tout the "unique, wide soundstage" presentation when it was just the out-of-phase speakers effect you're hearing. 🙄

  • @anuragsub
    @anuragsub Před 4 lety +3

    In techniques like hemispheric sync or binaural beats, the two different waves ( waves with slightly different frequencies ) used in left and right channels/ears get resolved by the brain hemispheres itself and do not necessarily need to physically crash with each other to produce the superimposed beat effect. But in this case, its kind of strange to know that the two hemispheres of the brain do not resolve the opposite phase waves by itself. You always have to make the waves of opposite phase physically meet to cancel them out.

  • @ikhpfieit
    @ikhpfieit Před 4 měsíci

    I was searching for a video with an actual demonstration of this effect, thank you!

  • @justanotherdayinwherever

    I like that you do experiments on many of the little things that I think about and find cool.

  • @rafee9442
    @rafee9442 Před 4 lety +3

    Also, on headphones, since one channel is inverted it sound like the sound is coming straight from my skull

  • @MichaelJOneill333
    @MichaelJOneill333 Před 4 lety +22

    .. .. ... . .... . ... .. ..... . ...!
    Oh sorry, I had noise cancelling on. I was saying "Awesome video Action Lab!"

  • @44flo
    @44flo Před 4 lety

    Really cool, thanks for that!

  • @cgntube
    @cgntube Před 4 lety

    thank you for another amazing video. Keep it up!

  • @Pa-1
    @Pa-1 Před 4 lety +3

    I wonder if this can be used to silence the sound of vehicles near an hospital or school or even near a residential area...

  • @Kaxlon
    @Kaxlon Před 4 lety +5

    Love it! This phenomenon also happens if your swap + and - on just one loudspeaker, it's called out of phase.
    Another cool audio phenomenon is to attach both + speaker outputs to one loudspeaker. It removes the center image, i.e. the vocals.
    If you do this on the speaker output remember to keep the volume low. A better solution is to do this mod on a external cable attached to your line/CD in.

  • @NoyBeCHaR
    @NoyBeCHaR Před 4 lety

    Love your videos, keep up

  • @goodyKoeln
    @goodyKoeln Před 4 lety

    Look at you, getting me to work and do things in quarantine.
    Great experiment! 👌🏻

  • @LewLaps
    @LewLaps Před 4 lety +4

    With the demonstration using the video instead of sound, what would happen if I took both videos, inverted one and the untouched one, put them side by side and crossed my eyes to focus on the two together? Like the 3d illusion you can find online? Would I just see nothing??

    • @everythingexpert4795
      @everythingexpert4795 Před 4 lety +1

      Lewis Bourne nope, because light behaves different than sound

    • @GraveUypo
      @GraveUypo Před 4 lety +2

      nah you'd still see what your dominant eye sees, mostly.
      that's actually the only way you're able to see some colors. like yellow-tinted blue, or green-tinted red (no, it's not green and orange. they look different and a bit weird)

  • @ScooterPS
    @ScooterPS Před 4 lety +303

    'If you cant Hear me right now, dont adjust your volume'
    Every single person: spams volume up button

    • @portalj
      @portalj Před 4 lety +6

      My ears hate me now

    • @adelemarie80
      @adelemarie80 Před 4 lety +2

      I did that then i read it

    • @ethanblount668
      @ethanblount668 Před 4 lety +1

      I was close to hitting that up button

    • @ranecE
      @ranecE Před 4 lety +1

      I just turend up my volume to see if there wasn't some kind of static left over.

    • @flop3869
      @flop3869 Před 4 lety +1

      I have nothing to reply so check out this doggo vibin czcams.com/video/dQw4w9WgXcQ/video.html

  • @EternityinOurHearts316

    I've been trying to figure out how to do this forever! Thank you!

  • @Natsu-kd1lk
    @Natsu-kd1lk Před 4 lety

    I like your videos! With you, i am always learning new things🔥

  • @ryanyanko3547
    @ryanyanko3547 Před 4 lety +3

    So... If two people say the exact same thing at the same time, you might hear nothing?

    • @ZLGaming140
      @ZLGaming140 Před 4 lety

      If that one person speak in invert and their sound wave hit each other. Yes you might hear nothing

    • @plush9519
      @plush9519 Před 4 lety

      Speaking generates complex waveforms with immense variations in wavelengths/frequency. Complete cancellation is possible and quite easy with perfect sine waves, but the most you could get with two different people speaking is a slight reduction of volume among a handfull of frequencies, and it would be negligible at that.

  • @SA-ux7xb
    @SA-ux7xb Před 4 lety +13

    There are 2 kind of people: who raised up the volume at the beginning, and who lies

  • @francesco050284
    @francesco050284 Před 4 lety

    Simple and amazing, a great work and thank you for sharing

  • @rateb9943
    @rateb9943 Před 4 lety +1

    This channel is wonderfully interesting!!

  • @marciostavares
    @marciostavares Před 4 lety +11

    It seems that CZcams auto generated subtitles is affected by this as well. There is no subtitles in the beginning.

  • @mpcastrodudes525
    @mpcastrodudes525 Před 4 lety +7

    Should have done it on the April fools day!! 😂
    99% people would have been fooled by that!!! 🙃😉

    • @onon128
      @onon128 Před 4 lety +1

      MPC Astro dudes no they wouldn’t . They would think he didn’t put any sound

    • @jamesbizs
      @jamesbizs Před 4 lety +1

      Would have been a stupid prank, nor would it be being fooled.

  • @nealsonf
    @nealsonf Před 4 lety

    Very cool! So smart to use the right and left channels!

  • @jeanette8943
    @jeanette8943 Před 4 lety +1

    These are the science questions I always want answers to. Thanks for so much information!!!!

  • @emerysteele
    @emerysteele Před 4 lety +3

    I know some photographers like to paint their editing rooms grey. Maybe there's something to that?

  • @dickJohnsonpeter
    @dickJohnsonpeter Před 4 lety +3

    It seems like something that should break my speaker.

  • @meherkiransinghkshatri4393

    Just loved it...was really cool... really really cool!

  • @jonhattanrai
    @jonhattanrai Před 4 lety +1

    And this is why it is so important to have every microphone IN PHASE when you record drums or a band.

  • @jamestsai6826
    @jamestsai6826 Před 4 lety +8

    This is literally "sound of the silence". Lol

  • @25style24
    @25style24 Před 4 lety +12

    After 4:34 wearing earphones at 1x speed I can hear you clearly, though at 2x it sounds strange. *Why is it so?*
    I am guessing because of CZcams's speeding algorithms.

  • @EPSTomcat11
    @EPSTomcat11 Před 4 lety

    Excellent demo

  • @raghavvaibhav2189
    @raghavvaibhav2189 Před 4 lety

    Absolutely brilliant 👍👍

  • @tropentine
    @tropentine Před 4 lety +6

    I tried this on my wife, didn't work, amplified the sound. But the dog pen isn't too bad.

  • @nakulankurmullam2982
    @nakulankurmullam2982 Před 4 lety +5

    This guy finds bugs in universe's code

  • @pikapi1837
    @pikapi1837 Před 4 lety

    That's truly amazing 😍🔥 good experiment

  • @blueocean_123
    @blueocean_123 Před 4 lety

    Superb !! This works in both stereo & in mono. Wow

  • @theworld0810
    @theworld0810 Před 4 lety +12

    When I was this early, a real image of a black hole wasn't discovered yet

    • @theworld0810
      @theworld0810 Před 4 lety

      @@tthung8668 yep REALLY early like everyone else

  • @5tegosaurus150
    @5tegosaurus150 Před 4 lety +4

    Now we just need to find a way to apply this noise cancellation in a way that allows us to play hentai on speakers in max volume without the sound escaping out of the room.

    • @padkirsch
      @padkirsch Před 4 lety

      😂😂😂 stop it... LOL

  • @ernstuzhansky
    @ernstuzhansky Před rokem

    Very cool!

  • @Ghozer
    @Ghozer Před 4 lety +1

    I used to use this method to make acapellas from full tracks, if I could source the original backing only (instrumental) you could invert that, and overlay on the full track, and be left with vocals only! :D
    It's an age-old method xD

  • @gilberttheregular8553
    @gilberttheregular8553 Před 4 lety +4

    It literally removed the sound on my phone.

  • @robinrai4973
    @robinrai4973 Před 4 lety +3

    That's how active noise cancelling works, right?

    • @ABaumstumpf
      @ABaumstumpf Před 4 lety

      Kinda - active noise cancellation works by picking up the noise (with microphones) and repeating it with the inverted signal - and doing so with as close to a matching phase as possible, taking into consideration the distance from the microphones to the speakers as well as the time it takes processing, as well as the acoustic characteristics of the headphones.
      But this here... he just set the sound to 0 before exporting (that is what he actually did with adding the track onto it self - the exported video has no sound-information what so ever at those parts so there is no cancelation)

  • @EssentiallyFalse
    @EssentiallyFalse Před 4 lety

    This is actually really nice

  • @rekhan3926
    @rekhan3926 Před 4 lety +1

    I'M EARLY! THANK YOU SOOO MUCH ABOUT SOMETHING INTERESTING.

  • @arham-abbas
    @arham-abbas Před 4 lety +3

    Hello Organisms,
    We have looked into this issue and are working on to fix the bug. The issue will be fixed in the next EARTH 2.0.152 update. By that time keep LIVING on.
    Your very own,
    GOD (Head Developer)

  • @82abn34
    @82abn34 Před 3 lety +2

    Nice concept! It would also be good to do the same type of video for binaural beats. I've enchanted my daughter by setting a slow sweep (~ 2Hz variation) on one channel while using a steady tone on the other channel (center frequency 300Hz). She was most intrigued by the Lissajou figure on the scope. The cat left the room.

  • @matthewtie31
    @matthewtie31 Před 4 lety

    woahhhh, that's amazing man

  • @ChristinaKilgore
    @ChristinaKilgore Před 4 lety +1

    omg... listening to this on a 2.1 speaker system is the weirdest most uncomfortable thing >_>

  • @1wasinAlpha
    @1wasinAlpha Před 4 lety

    That was pretty darn interesting :D

  • @jsxm.2559
    @jsxm.2559 Před 4 lety

    This is soo cool you make the best content about science in youtube"

  • @aritgirlfoamflinging4816
    @aritgirlfoamflinging4816 Před 4 lety +1

    "watch what happens when we overlay these audio files"
    Me: *gasps* oh that actually makes a lot of sense

  • @wrangler0829
    @wrangler0829 Před 4 lety

    So cool!!!

  • @marktaylor8659
    @marktaylor8659 Před 3 lety +1

    So, if you suffer from tinnitus, could you invert the sound you hear, play it through headphones (or hearing aids) and it would cancel the hissing or ringing sound out?

  • @MixedGoku
    @MixedGoku Před 4 lety

    Wonderful experiment

  • @sairithikkomuravelly9697

    Very interesting..!

  • @geocarey
    @geocarey Před 4 lety

    That's how the old Hafler style of quadraphonic sound used to work. In a stereo recording some sounds arrive at the left and right microphones out of phase. If you subtract the left and right channels from each other and play them through speakers behind you, the out of phase sounds will appear to be behind you. It worked splendidly for live audience recordings because audience noise tended to be out of phase. Happy days with a few op amps and a soldering iron!

  • @atomicreptiliascreator738

    Derp City has a special speaker wall unit that releases a special type of soundwave that drags out (meaning it sounds like it is getting slower and echoes) until you can't hear it anymore, and it has to do with DISTANCE.

  • @ladindustries1570
    @ladindustries1570 Před rokem

    Amazing video. I have been wanting to mess with noise cancelation myself. Does anyone know what audio editor is being used?

  • @atom2319
    @atom2319 Před 4 lety

    Hey.... It works... Very clever... Thanks for that experiment

  • @DerekHundik
    @DerekHundik Před 4 lety

    what software you using for audio