What Would Really Happen if a Vibranium Meteor Hit Earth? | Because Science w/ Kyle Hill

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  • čas přidán 28. 02. 2018
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    Black Panther showed us how a vibranium meteor impacted Wakanda in many ways, but would it play out the same way in real life? Kyle has the Earth shaking science on this week's Because Science!
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    Artist: Andrew Bowser
    Learn more:
    • MENA NGAI: bit.ly/2F2W2Eg
    • TORINO SCALE: bit.ly/2HRVOh1
    • METEOR IMPACT CALCULATOR: bit.ly/2CPklQ6
    • IMPACT DEPTH APPROX: bit.ly/2FDBH5t
    • INTRO TO IMPACT CRATERS: bit.ly/2FEbW4N
    • CHONDRITE: bit.ly/2oEOpsz
    • METEOR IMPACT SIMULATOR: bit.ly/2FENTTA
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Komentáře • 2,2K

  • @blipadouzi
    @blipadouzi Před 6 lety +716

    The problem with assuming that a 10,000 ton meteor would disintegrate before impact is that you're not considering that the 10,000 tons of our Vibranium meteor is what is left of it after it travelled through the atmosphere. The original spacial meteor would have been significantly larger before the Wakandans encountered it.

    • @benjaminhackett8896
      @benjaminhackett8896 Před 5 lety +56

      That's what I was thinking too.

    • @jwhiteheadcc
      @jwhiteheadcc Před 5 lety +46

      Also, not all of that kinetic energy is directed into the meteor. Quite a bit of it is radiated as heat (in all directions, roughly, not just back into it), and objects don't conduct energy instantly either, so it takes time for the meteor to absorb that energy. :)

    • @Hokie94CPA
      @Hokie94CPA Před 5 lety +34

      Doubt it was 100% Vibranium either. Likely had other mineral ores within as well.

    • @michaelchurch4863
      @michaelchurch4863 Před 5 lety +12

      Im a blacksmith your right the intre heat would have melted the crust of the meteor as pounds of metal is melting in the atmosphere and falling off it would start wieghting less and less

    • @itspinkie2077
      @itspinkie2077 Před 5 lety +22

      he addressed all of this at the very beginning

  • @muski6086
    @muski6086 Před 6 lety +594

    How could they even farm vibranium to made their weapons etc if it wouldnt break with pickaxes but absorb the kinetic energy? 🤔

    • @KlausFilmss
      @KlausFilmss Před 5 lety +41

      Rizzuna's Amv/Mv melt it

    • @jonathonpolk3592
      @jonathonpolk3592 Před 5 lety +228

      Perhaps the raw vibranium ore doesnt have those amazing properties, such that it only becomes super kinetically absorbant after being forged or processed into useful materials. That way, you could mine the stuff; you just wouldnt be able to fix or repair stuff once made.

    • @stevenirizarry1304
      @stevenirizarry1304 Před 5 lety +26

      The comics explain it I believe

    • @the_blind_hearing6
      @the_blind_hearing6 Před 5 lety +11

      @@jonathonpolk3592 Makes sense

    • @ice_7057
      @ice_7057 Před 5 lety +44

      Gavin he means they purify it and that’s why it doesn’t have the properties because it’s not pure

  • @christianevrard8258
    @christianevrard8258 Před 5 lety +179

    They said it’s 1/3 the weight of steel so use that for density

    • @Zathaghil
      @Zathaghil Před 4 lety +8

      And why say "use that for density" rather than simply stating it'd be between 2,58g/cm³ and 2,68g/cm³ based on said statements? Which, in case anyone wonders makes it lighter than aluminium.

    • @CyberGenesis1
      @CyberGenesis1 Před 4 lety +10

      @@joelongo450 Non US countries use commas not periods for decimals >.>

    • @CyberGenesis1
      @CyberGenesis1 Před 4 lety +2

      Steel is roughly 7.8g/cm3, so his figure for density by using Titanium was higher - which would make the meteor larger by about 40%, still barely 30-35m wide, still terribly small

    • @nephdrummond3168
      @nephdrummond3168 Před 4 lety +13

      Joseph Longo Look I get that you’re trolling because of how idiotic you seem, it’s nearly painful to read, but seriously the comma thing is just how many countries as a whole do it. Just because we’re an exception to the rules established by everyone else in the world doesn’t make us right

    • @nephdrummond3168
      @nephdrummond3168 Před 4 lety +12

      Joseph Longo I do use commas, because I am also an American. We are the weirdos here, we are the ones doing the thing wrong while most people do it correctly. And it’s just swapped usage dude, in Germany for example, it’s 1.000 while here in the US it’s 1,000. It’s almost like there are differences in how things work when you’re in the new country that decided to do everything wrong just to separate itself from the posh brits. And grams were defined by the French yeah, but the Greeks used the same unit, just had a different name. Meanwhile ounces still aren’t even defined because there’s 11 different ounces for mass, and then fluid ounces, which aren’t even for mass, they’re for volume, because ounce is basically just “some small amount” that we’ve kept using for way too long instead of standardizing it.

  • @sagesheahan6732
    @sagesheahan6732 Před 5 lety +27

    You just made me realize, science class in high school in the marvel universe would be very interesting.

  • @m.ibrahim_2501
    @m.ibrahim_2501 Před 6 lety +58

    That must be why shuri said she had to deactivate the vibranium in order to transfer it safely to the surface. The vibranium still had the kinetic energy from its collision with earth stored up and wound probably cause a problem if not deactivated. Please notify if I've made any mistakes.

    • @Painteagle
      @Painteagle Před 6 lety +27

      That would explain why it is mentioned as volatile and could be their source of power.

    • @m.ibrahim_2501
      @m.ibrahim_2501 Před 6 lety +3

      Painteagle nice to know i wasn't the only person thinking that

    • @ForestRaptor
      @ForestRaptor Před 6 lety +24

      Yeah this is the first thing that came to mind. If it had absorved all that kinetic energy and never released it... well oh my Wakanda is sitting on a bomb :o

    • @MatterBeamTSF
      @MatterBeamTSF Před 6 lety +2

      I have had that same idea! It could even be used a power source!

    • @m.ibrahim_2501
      @m.ibrahim_2501 Před 6 lety +1

      any idea how??? maybe a video idea for kyle

  • @TheRealJahan
    @TheRealJahan Před 6 lety +75

    If I hadn’t seen the movie the use of rhinos in the video would seem extremely random lol

    • @nejx8711
      @nejx8711 Před 6 lety +8

      blvckraikage I havent watched the movie yet, but I just decided not to question it...

    • @becausescience
      @becausescience  Před 6 lety +17

      Spoiler alert: There are rhinos -- KH

    • @rewrose2838
      @rewrose2838 Před 6 lety +4

      I have not seen the movie and , being a regular BS-er, I think the lack of lightsabers in the video was extremely random

    • @goodrabbi7176
      @goodrabbi7176 Před 6 lety +2

      I have not seen the movie, thought the rhino was random, and then read this comment. And with that, we come full circle!

    • @Wavemaninawe
      @Wavemaninawe Před 6 lety

      Because Science
      Armored Attack Rhinos.
      I think Bear Cavallery has gotten some serious competition.

  • @isaiasabades1166
    @isaiasabades1166 Před 6 lety +20

    "it would hit him and drop off pathetically" best quote in all of youtube

  • @YakMotley
    @YakMotley Před 5 lety +181

    This channel is awesome!

  • @smishmaster
    @smishmaster Před 6 lety +67

    In the game "Portal," you have two portals on the floor and ceiling, creating an infinite fall. If you dropped an object into it, it would reach terminal velocity and cease to accelerate due to air resistance. So what would happen if you dropped it in a vacuum? Would it continue to accelerate indefinitely due to gravity? If so, why would it not reach the speed of light?

    • @azuregriffin1116
      @azuregriffin1116 Před 6 lety +19

      *hit blunt*

    • @jonathankydd1816
      @jonathankydd1816 Před 6 lety +11

      terminal velocity not only relies on air resistance but on gravity, so it would still reach a terminal velocity.

    • @Artaimus
      @Artaimus Před 6 lety +3

      In theory off the top of my head I want to say yes to this. Because it keeps resetting to the top of the fall without anything to slow it down in some way it would continue to accelerate indefinitely. I feel that the acceleration for reach loop would be reduced slightly as time progresses though as the object would pass through the loop in a shorter time each pass.
      Certainly needs a closer look though.

    • @MatterBeamTSF
      @MatterBeamTSF Před 6 lety +4

      Two portals separated by a length of air will cause the object to reach a terminal velocity....
      However, imagine a set of portal separated by a distance smaller than the length of the object, or even with NO separation. The object would accelerate until it reached the speed of light.

    • @walkinmn
      @walkinmn Před 6 lety +1

      Yes, without air resistance, it could accelerate until getting very close to the speed of light

  • @kyzer422
    @kyzer422 Před 5 lety +52

    What if you threw Mjolnir at Black Panther? (Assuming you were worthy)

    • @arkman034
      @arkman034 Před 4 lety +7

      @Lizardguy i wonder if they'd play catch with mjolnir

    • @juano3000
      @juano3000 Před 3 lety +3

      Mjolnir is a Quantum Drived "Drone" powered by a controlled gyroscope made of the star alloy. That allows all of its properties. If that, Black Panther wouldnt be able to stop it, since Mjolnir movement would be driven by pure momentum, not kinetic energy.

    • @juano3000
      @juano3000 Před 3 lety +1

      Sorry. I didnt catch on the worthiness part.

    • @toucan_clips9685
      @toucan_clips9685 Před 3 lety +3

      Isn't captain america's sheild also vibranium, cause they show this happening in one of the movies when thor hits captain america's shield so it would probably have a similar effect and launch black panther either up and dig him into the ground

  • @Elywen
    @Elywen Před 6 lety +103

    Didn't think about it's kinetic energy absorption but there is a problem in that explanation. We see in the movie the mine of Vibranium and it's HUGE, large enough to use multiple maglev trains. We also see a very large volume of the stuff, both in the different weapons and items created with it (assuming it's not used as alloy) but also as raw form in the trains and in stocking containers. So either the 10.000T is false information from Wakanda or Vibranium's density is much, much lower than Titanium is, which changes drastically the size of the meteor that would need to impact Earth to create such a mine.
    We also would need to consider that Wakanda is using the stuff for many years and it is a finite resource so even if there is still 10.000T "today", it still was much more when it hit the ground, especially considering that like with everything else, Wakanda had to learn how to use it effectively, therefor wasting a lot of the material.

    • @xepharion
      @xepharion Před 6 lety +4

      Rin Vibranium is "stronger than steel, and one third of the weight", as stated by Howard Stark in CA:TFA

    • @Elywen
      @Elywen Před 6 lety +1

      Doesn't change much for the size of the mine, the mass lost in experimentation etc ...

    • @xepharion
      @xepharion Před 6 lety +4

      it brings the size of the meteor to about 18.8m so yeah it doesn't make much of a difference. only commented to inform you of the metals density since you mentioned that you didn't know it

    • @Elywen
      @Elywen Před 6 lety +1

      Except that it's not what we see being depicted. The volumes don't match and with it, the size of the meteor that hit the ground. But thank you for bringing more information.

    • @xepharion
      @xepharion Před 6 lety +3

      Rin I guess they just assumed that most people wouldn't question it and didn't bother to make sure that it was all factually and mathematically correct 🤷🏻

  • @qwertyjklz8823
    @qwertyjklz8823 Před rokem +11

    My question is how you could mine the vibraniam if it takes in genetic energy

  • @captaincomrade8056
    @captaincomrade8056 Před 6 lety +66

    Didn't Howard Stark say vibranium is "stronger than steel and a third of the weight" in CA:TFA?

    • @rewrose2838
      @rewrose2838 Před 6 lety +20

      Did he? If that's canon and Kyle missed it, corrections are due~

    • @RHR199X
      @RHR199X Před 6 lety +4

      can confirm I saw it a few days ago

    • @vampyricon7026
      @vampyricon7026 Před 6 lety

      +

    • @briancarpenter6413
      @briancarpenter6413 Před 6 lety +1

      Can confirm

    • @negavenom
      @negavenom Před 6 lety

      Now it makes me wonder how did Howard got the vibranium in the first place

  • @sushiwalrus5333
    @sushiwalrus5333 Před 6 lety +274

    oh look its the avenger with the best hair, Thor.

  • @joshgreer9377
    @joshgreer9377 Před 6 lety +28

    Kyle these videos are marvelous! Get it.
    Your mission to make science interesting, and entertaining is the same mission that Adam and Jamie had with mythbusers. I know you hosted the new mythbusters recruitment show but why didn’t you take the job yourself? I would have loved to see you on tv and think you definitely live up to the name.

  • @Seviciazankoku
    @Seviciazankoku Před 6 lety +3

    Hey Kyle, I bring you a Gambit vs Vibranium question (I just love Gambit, please?). Gambit has the power to take the potencial energy of a (not living) object, and turn it into Kinetic energy (or something like that), to the point where the object end ups blowing up. On Captain America vs Gambit we see Gambit charging Cap's shield. How is it possible for a material that absorbs Kinetic energy to be so charged up that ends up blowing up like that? Thanks!

  • @jeetendrakumargarag2491
    @jeetendrakumargarag2491 Před 6 lety +93

    Is it fair to call The Flash ,"The Insecticide". Does he not kill insects flying around the city while he runs at superspeed as the speed force protects him.( Presuming central city has insects). If he does kill insects by running into them, how many ,does he incinerate them ? I need answers people!!!!!!! Btw love the show Kyle.

    • @Painteagle
      @Painteagle Před 6 lety +14

      That's a fun question! I think how the comics would explain it it that the flash would pick up insects and move them with him for a bit and then drop them off, and while they are with him, they would move like insects do around a normal runner. At least that's basically how the comics describe the air moving and how he can grab people at full speed. That could be a lot of random insects that travel around the world with him as he runs. Another interesting question would be what mix of smells the flash would carry with him as he runs, transporting the air with him.

    • @jeetendrakumargarag2491
      @jeetendrakumargarag2491 Před 6 lety

      Painteagle ,cool theory never thought of it that way.

    • @jonathankydd1816
      @jonathankydd1816 Před 6 lety +2

      well the speed force does alter physics around him, so it's possible they pass around him.

    • @walkinmn
      @walkinmn Před 6 lety +1

      You'll need to find out the density of insects in the air in a urban area and the frontal surface of the flash while running.

    • @jeetendrakumargarag2491
      @jeetendrakumargarag2491 Před 6 lety +2

      jonathan kydd well if insects passed around him then the flash would never get shot by a bullet ,he wouldn't even have to dodge,right?

  • @AgeTemplar
    @AgeTemplar Před 6 lety +16

    5:58 - Getting hit in the face by a rhino? There's a word for that: Rhinoblasty.

  • @thomascullinan6319
    @thomascullinan6319 Před 6 lety +18

    Just saw all your videos on Vibranium, and now I'm wondering how the hell it's possible to mine it with primitive tools. Wakanda's a technological marvel now, but when it first landed they'd still have to mine it and forge it by hitting it with tools. Wouldn't the Vibranium absorb those impacts and make it impossible for a primitive culture to use?

    • @ZUnknownFox
      @ZUnknownFox Před 2 lety +5

      you can cut vibranium. it's shock absorbent not indestructible,

    • @jordanwhite352
      @jordanwhite352 Před rokem +1

      ​@@ZUnknownFox Yes but current cutting technology outside of lasers are impact based.

  • @Starwolf65
    @Starwolf65 Před 5 lety +32

    I doubt you’ll read this but my wife called you “physics Fabio”!

  • @soccertl
    @soccertl Před 6 lety +245

    With all the properties it has, how is Vibranium mined? Wouldn't it break all the normal tools just trying to mine it since it can absorb all that energy from the tools? It can't be just the suit that absorbs the energy, look at all the abuse Captain America's can take and not take a scratch. If they just melt it, how would they have enough heat to melt it?

    • @fave7824
      @fave7824 Před 6 lety +17

      soccertl This

    • @Joshmanfang
      @Joshmanfang Před 6 lety +46

      It actually gets harder as it absorbs energy in the comics I believe. So it is way softer at first

    • @GeneralKnife
      @GeneralKnife Před 6 lety +15

      soccertl maybe something like with diamonds they use vibranium stuff to mine the same thing

    • @MrHeastost
      @MrHeastost Před 6 lety +25

      You sir are asking the real kind of questions.

    • @MrHeastost
      @MrHeastost Před 6 lety +5

      Same with adamantium btw

  • @whippetgood1806
    @whippetgood1806 Před 6 lety +716

    So with these revelations in mind, wtf would happen with a vibranium bullet? Could you accelerate a vibrium slug in the barrel or would the gun explode? Would it do more or less damage then a normal bullet? Should Stark be tipping all his anti tank rounds with it?
    *Edit: Great convo in the comments y'all! I think we concluded that it would shoot, and you wouldn't want your body to be the earth in this meteor comparison!

    • @MatterBeamTSF
      @MatterBeamTSF Před 6 lety +107

      The bullet would still be pushed by the acceleration of the gases created by the cartridge.

    • @yukeshvs9856
      @yukeshvs9856 Před 6 lety +21

      Matter Beam does it penetrate ?

    • @MatterBeamTSF
      @MatterBeamTSF Před 6 lety +82

      Because momentum is conserved, the bullet will lose it upon impact with a target. So, just like a normal bullet, it will apply a lot of pressure onto a small surface - it penetrates!

    • @psychowolf5552
      @psychowolf5552 Před 6 lety +91

      Would make one hell of a clean entrence wound

    • @edoardoprevelato6577
      @edoardoprevelato6577 Před 6 lety +2

      psychowolf 5552 what if it's hollowpoint?

  • @timoengelmann2055
    @timoengelmann2055 Před 6 lety +102

    two things I want to add:
    1.you can even see that vibranium doesn't absorb momentum in the movie when t'challa kicks the suit in the beginning and sends it flying.
    2. I haven't read the comics but like you said it the meteor had 10.000 tons of Vibranium as it *hit earth* so it could actually happen right? Since there could have been waayy more as it started it's journey but most of it burned away until there were only those 10.000 tons left that are now lying around there...
    And to add a quick question wouldn't it technically have that kind of shockwave effect we see from the suit? because you said they would use springs inside the suit to then have them blast out all of that energy. and since every material is able to be pushed together just a tiny little bit and go back to it's normal form I think that on this enourmous scale it would still make something noticeable

    • @Damstraight68
      @Damstraight68 Před 6 lety +26

      The Lore is that of the Earths core being entirely vibranium. Which is actually a Celestial Being before it is born fully. Cool to mention that this is also the reason for all super powered beings born on Earth; the Celestial having to protect itself.

    • @timoengelmann2055
      @timoengelmann2055 Před 6 lety

      Damstraight68 nice to know

    • @know8926
      @know8926 Před 6 lety +5

      timo engelmann as for the shockwaves, yes, i do think that would be possibile (on a way lower scale tho) but certainly not as we have seen in the movie, with the orange and purple effects.
      I rather think that vibranium is able to transform most of an impacts kinetic energy into heat, rapidly evaporating some of the vibranium in the suit, thus rapidly increasing its volume, which could indeed lead to a visual shockwave, with the different colours being caused through combining the vibranium with different other materials

    • @jamesedward1560
      @jamesedward1560 Před 6 lety +1

      It's just a movie and Vibranium is not real 😂

    • @jamesthegood123
      @jamesthegood123 Před 5 lety

      James Epic! and what about santa ?

  • @deadfacekingsman
    @deadfacekingsman Před 6 lety +4

    Another great episode. Love it man, I've learned so much from watching your videos for three years now. How can i suggest an episode? I have so many questions.

  • @TheBernito2
    @TheBernito2 Před 6 lety +10

    the cool thing you forgot is that the Vibranium mine does seem to be in a simple hole in the ground and not a crater!

  • @craighadden1643
    @craighadden1643 Před 6 lety +13

    I am doing A-level physics at the moment and these videos are great for putting formulas that i am learning into practice in a really nerdy way perfect for me to understand it better.
    Thank you so much for making these videos, keep up the great work.

  • @randallchapman6229
    @randallchapman6229 Před 3 lety +2

    I just found your channel and I love it. Question, have you done one on time travel and what that would actually involve considering the movements of the earth?

  • @TheZolack
    @TheZolack Před 6 lety +5

    Kyle, Love the channel m,man. Two questions:
    1. If Vibranium absorbs sound, how does anyone hear T'Challa speak when he's wearing the Black Panther outfit?
    2. Could Black Bolt destroy the vibranium meteor in Wakanda?

  • @wuzzy41123
    @wuzzy41123 Před 6 lety +20

    Howard Stark stated in Captain America: The First Avenger (when Cap first gets his shield) that Vibranium is "stronger than steel and a third the weight". If steel is roughly 7.85 g/cm3, then Vibranium should be about 2.61 g/cm3.

    • @ManuSaraswat
      @ManuSaraswat Před 6 lety

      This question needs be accounted for.. Good reference..

  • @dustydarkhorse
    @dustydarkhorse Před 6 lety +23

    Because of course you post this right as I'm walking into my genetics lab lol.

  • @wuhugm
    @wuhugm Před 6 lety +44

    The energy during the entry was released underground, that's what made the hollow space there, right?

    • @ThatsPrettyFunnyMan
      @ThatsPrettyFunnyMan Před 6 lety +7

      Does the meteor have a threshold or maximum amount of energy it can absorb? Or does the whole absorbing kinetic energy thing is just Suri's nanoengineering? Because the suit has visual hint of threshold, it glows as it get 'charged' up with potential energy.

    • @rtcameron1
      @rtcameron1 Před 5 lety +1

      Are you referring to the Savage Land?

  • @drylooped
    @drylooped Před 6 lety +5

    I would love to see him switch from comics to anime and answer. What would really happen to our bodies if we were to pilot a Gundam or practically any large scale war mech existed?

  • @LocalMaple
    @LocalMaple Před 6 lety +21

    Is it logical to assume the meteor wasn’t pure vibranium (as in, was incased in a larger rock medium? How would that change the implications of the impact?

    • @HovektheArtist
      @HovektheArtist Před 6 lety

      In older versions of the comics the vibranium meteor was encased in "metal x" a metal that causes the vibranium to become inert, they did this just to explain how they mined it

    • @ForestRaptor
      @ForestRaptor Před 6 lety

      it would mean some heat, some explody bits on impact. But assuming the vibranium is holding the meteor together, i'm guessing only the outer layers would be affected and given what he states about how anything under 25m in diameter burns/brakes up before hitting soil, safe to assume most of that material would have vaporised in atmo. I think. I'm not doing this with numbers but "instinct" and what I understood.

    • @LocalMaple
      @LocalMaple Před 6 lety +1

      I suppose an initial question is how large a meteor is needed for the vibranium core to arrive on earth intact, and how much mass it would have.
      My main concern is F=MA. If the mass is larger due to the coating rock/metal x, and said protective barrier was mostly evaporated when it hit the atmosphere, then would M1*A1 = M2*A2, and hence change the impact speed of the meteor and the resulting crater?

    • @PerilousSnow161
      @PerilousSnow161 Před 6 lety

      I think a simpler question would be how big would the meteor have to be for them to have that much vibranium. It’s stated they had that much of it there’s no way of getting around that.

  • @ikkiville
    @ikkiville Před 6 lety +12

    If his suit adsorbs the sound of him walking to make him silent, could someone wearing it be able to talk and or hear through the barrier of said suit?

    • @Lorendrawn
      @Lorendrawn Před 6 lety

      Only the shoes emit no sounds - or else he'd have the deadpool issue of being muffled.

  • @HardStyleSwagg
    @HardStyleSwagg Před 6 lety

    this is the second video i watch on your channel. i love how u mix science and some humor. Subscribed

  • @shaden6157
    @shaden6157 Před 6 lety +3

    You should do a video like this on Cyclops visor and how it blocks his optic blast but still let's him use his powers

  • @scaryuncledevin
    @scaryuncledevin Před 6 lety +56

    Could a mantis shrimp puncture Black Panther's suit?

    • @LocalMaple
      @LocalMaple Před 6 lety +8

      Devin Rodriguez I believe the movie says the Vibranium is woven. So if it’s strike is thin enough to pass through, yes.

    • @whippetgood1806
      @whippetgood1806 Před 6 lety +27

      Am I the only one who would love to see that confused ass mantis shrimp realizing his punch of death did fuck all to the suit?

    • @Weird-Mike
      @Weird-Mike Před 6 lety

      Devin Rodriguez lol

    • @22jeffstreet11
      @22jeffstreet11 Před 6 lety

      No

    • @Rohan-rp3kg
      @Rohan-rp3kg Před 6 lety

      Devin Rodriguez uuu

  • @TheRealJahan
    @TheRealJahan Před 6 lety +31

    *I LOVE BECAUSE SCIENCE*

  • @snorpenbass4196
    @snorpenbass4196 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Now that we've gotten Wakanda Forever, we know that a) the meteor _did_ break up when it hit the atmosphere - half went to Wakanda, another half to a certain spot in the Mexican Gulf. Presumably there might also be a chunk in Antarctica if they borrow more from the comics, a chunk that has a kind of destabilizing effect on regular vibranium. The vibranium we see in the movies is an alloy, and the actual raw stuff resembles porous volcanic rock with blue glowy bits in it. That's also when it's got the weird magic-type radiation to it that makes everything exposed to it go super - in the final alloyed form it just looks like darker steel. The Black Panther suits are lacquered - the claws are un-colored and look like polished, chromed steel, the war club Killmonger claims from the museum looks like regular, brushed steel. The weakness it has is sonic vibrations along certain frequencies, which might have been reached during the descent.
    ...TL;DR, the meteor wasn't invincible when it hit the atmosphere and split up into chunks along the southern hemisphere.

  • @wolfroninxd4226
    @wolfroninxd4226 Před 5 lety +3

    Destiny 2 the striker Titan how can you run faster,jump higher,punch and conduct thunder and lightning into a fighting style.

  • @illN
    @illN Před 6 lety +15

    since Vibranium is known to absorb most if not all kinetic energy, would Black Panther not freeze to death inside the suit?

    • @Brick_One_A_Lego_Story
      @Brick_One_A_Lego_Story Před 6 lety +1

      Nero Remember that Wakanda has a very advanced technology. Black Panther's suit might have a heating system.

    • @goldseman5166
      @goldseman5166 Před 6 lety +5

      No, because he neva freeze

    • @know8926
      @know8926 Před 6 lety

      becouse mans not hot

  • @blakelee4555
    @blakelee4555 Před 6 lety +10

    It wouldn't break up in the atmosphere because that is due to friction with the air, and since it absorbs kinetic energy, the collisions with air molecules would not heat up vibranium significantly.

    • @azuregriffin1116
      @azuregriffin1116 Před 6 lety +3

      Blake Lee then surely it would permenantly be near absolute 0.

    • @MatterBeamTSF
      @MatterBeamTSF Před 6 lety

      This is correct!

    • @Monochromicornicopia
      @Monochromicornicopia Před 6 lety +2

      It would still heat up, that's what absorbing kinetic energy means

    • @MatterBeamTSF
      @MatterBeamTSF Před 6 lety

      Heat energy just is the kinetic motion of atoms and molecules at the nano-scale.
      If vibranium can absorb kinetic energy, then it can absorb heat.

    • @Monochromicornicopia
      @Monochromicornicopia Před 6 lety +1

      @Brendan Balken
      Matter Beam is correct. If vibranium can absorb kinetic energy, it can absorb heat as well
      EDIT: Also, vibranium *IS* magic. Don't get it twisted.

  • @flareinc7413
    @flareinc7413 Před rokem

    Very cool video and idea :) Thank you,Kyle,for making this.

  • @paulmitchell8361
    @paulmitchell8361 Před 6 lety

    i honestly never thought i would enjoy science, i despised it when i was in school, but you almost make me want to go back & do it properly.

  • @williamkaylor2724
    @williamkaylor2724 Před 6 lety +3

    This is exactly the question I had while watching Black Panther! My immediate thought was "This is a question for Because Science".... Thank you!

  • @Artaimus
    @Artaimus Před 6 lety +4

    Taking into account how vibranium works, would it be prudent to revisit the various points and episodes about Captain America's shield?

  • @KingBongHogger
    @KingBongHogger Před 6 lety +16

    Because Science got it's own channel?! Insta-sub! I just hope you won't lose that many views by switching channels. Keep up the awesome vids!

  • @IronAlien
    @IronAlien Před 5 lety +4

    10:55 is the best part is going to make it my ringtone..

  • @Spacetauren
    @Spacetauren Před 6 lety +29

    But Vibranium isn't silent. In fact, it's the opposite of silent : everytime you move an amount of vibranium, it starts emitting this peculiar "ringing" noise, that stops only when the Vibranium stops moving. Could it be that instead of "absorbing" energy dispersion that is usually expressed through sound and heat, vibranium actually "redirects" any amount of kinetic energy that would normally disperse in it as heat and deformation, and instead produces sound ?

    • @sino_diogenes
      @sino_diogenes Před 6 lety +3

      the impact would be loud as fuck

    • @danilooliveira6580
      @danilooliveira6580 Před 6 lety +4

      exactly, you actually see that in the avengers movie when thor hits the captain's shield with the mjolnir. all the energy just disperses and create a huge shockwave

    • @no3ironman11100
      @no3ironman11100 Před 6 lety +5

      That's why it's called vibranium and what our thor doesn't understand. It doesn't absorb things by vibrating. It just magically absorbs any threat and emits it back out as sound by vibrating the energy off at high frequencies.

    • @toomanysandwiches8665
      @toomanysandwiches8665 Před 6 lety +1

      you're not a genius leave the thinking and science stuff to the experts , like this guy!

    • @dragogod6827
      @dragogod6827 Před 5 lety

      THE GREAT HERMIT OF NO LIFE what if he is though!!!????
      Hmmmmmmm......🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔

  • @carlsagan1377
    @carlsagan1377 Před 6 lety +6

    Kyle, I have a question- in the movie, we see the Vibranium mines as yawning and cavernous, far more so than anything 20m across. If it was, say, a kilometer, would it still be very tame?
    Thanks,
    A guy who heard a meteor over his house in January

  • @LiquidBlackWolf
    @LiquidBlackWolf Před 5 lety +2

    So Kyle... How would you mine, vibranium?

  • @Zombie8tHeart
    @Zombie8tHeart Před 6 lety +2

    Amazing episode! But it makes me wonder, how big originally was the meteor that created the crater in Arizona?

  • @sagar-jf4km
    @sagar-jf4km Před 6 lety +16

    Damn those hivefives are so unsatisfying.

  • @hozimina
    @hozimina Před 6 lety +76

    Wouldn't it make more sense to construct the meteor out of a substance that is already on the super level. I had always believed vibrainium to be more akin to boron nitride or BN due to its already high thermal absorption (melting point 2'973 C), low density (2.1g/cm*3), and high durability (due to it naturally having a hexagonal crystal lattice and it's most promising aspect the wurtzite form). Since we are giving vibrainum a lot of leeway, can't we give it just a little more here too?

    • @borttorbbq2556
      @borttorbbq2556 Před 6 lety

      Titanium is a good one to compare w'vibrainium to as its actual durability is simaler to steel its the unique property that gives it its ridiculous abilities keep in its raw form it gains stupid abilities whrn alloyed ( like how oru is basicly like steel till enchanted)

    • @change5190
      @change5190 Před 6 lety +2

      Because Vibranium has properties that arn't realistic to our current materials so your material would behave in away that wouldn't even resemble Vibranium.
      Just because Vibranium is near pearless in durability doesn't mean you can substitute it for another of high durability.

    • @borttorbbq2556
      @borttorbbq2556 Před 6 lety

      Tesla Virus true

    • @toxicdeath7929
      @toxicdeath7929 Před 6 lety

      Hozimina looks like someone has been listening at the chemistry class

  • @DracoSafarius
    @DracoSafarius Před 6 lety +18

    Doesn't Vibranium also use said kinetic energy absorbed to strengthen itself comic-wise>?

    • @Vibranium_man
      @Vibranium_man Před 2 lety

      You would be correct. When the energy is absorbed, it would store those energies within the subatomic bonds of the Vibranium itself. Therefore, it would become stronger the more you hit it until it overloads and it explodes Comic wise. Read rise of the black panther vol 1 1, it basically says what i have said about it storing the energy in its bonds.

  • @oscarperezcame
    @oscarperezcame Před 4 lety +1

    Kyle! Using the hints in MTG, can you make a video explaining how the PW go from one plane to another?! That would be awesome!

  • @unsimplemulticellularlifef5739

    You never stop making me interested, keep it up

  • @MA-RANGEROVER
    @MA-RANGEROVER Před 6 lety +5

    Did he just do a "sneakers" joke.....He did didn't he.

  • @FlagCutie
    @FlagCutie Před 6 lety +1

    Awww! I was half expecting it to bounce away!

  • @jonathanwilliams6922
    @jonathanwilliams6922 Před 6 lety

    Great job man

  • @krazyk8083
    @krazyk8083 Před 6 lety +11

    Would the vibranium being super heated upon entry change the pliability of the metal itself, thus changing the properties and impact?
    P.S. - Kyle, buddy, I love you. My kids love this show and they crack up watching you.

    • @Dlo2018
      @Dlo2018 Před 6 lety +1

      heating of a metal strips it of oxygen molecules making it more pure in a way. however it would take a certain amount of heat to make it pliable...and we dont know how much that is. heating a metal doesnt change it's properties either. the only to do that is to add other metals to it. which is why titanium is an alloy.

    • @MatterBeamTSF
      @MatterBeamTSF Před 6 lety +1

      A logical consequence of being able to absorb kinetic energy and vibrations is that the vibranium can also absorb heat, which is basically molecules moving quickly at microscopic scales. Sp... it won't ever heat up.

  • @BobyTechno
    @BobyTechno Před 6 lety +29

    Does a lightsaber has a shadow?

    • @i.liketocommentlongcomment8558
      @i.liketocommentlongcomment8558 Před 6 lety +11

      BobyTechno yes and no. light has no shadow but the handle does

    • @BobyTechno
      @BobyTechno Před 6 lety +2

      I.LikeToCommentLongComments, I am not speaking of light, I am speaking of plasma. I am speaking of the plasma blade of the lightsaber that Kyle imagined.

    • @logal94
      @logal94 Před 6 lety +7

      actually light does have a shadow, of you have a weak flashlight and shine a laser through it the laser will block some light and leave a shadow.

    • @appledough3843
      @appledough3843 Před 6 lety

      BobyTechno
      It's like if you're holding a torch during daylight. Does the light of the sun passing the fire create a shadow on the other side do to the sunlight around the torch fire not hitting the fire but hitting the ground? How would that look?

    • @InfamousArmstrong
      @InfamousArmstrong Před 5 lety +1

      Only if you use a light that's significantly brighter than the lightsaber.

  • @darraghwalsh2730
    @darraghwalsh2730 Před 6 lety +3

    The silent claps were so unsatisfying

  • @xorcyst420
    @xorcyst420 Před 6 lety +2

    Depends on the type of vibranium, some absorb kinetic energy, some absorb sound waves, some are just metal, some have qualities of each.

  • @thumbpunch
    @thumbpunch Před 6 lety +7

    Hey Kyle, love the show! I just want to thank you for single handedly reinvigorating my love of science! My question is this. If vibranium is so good at absorbing kinetic energy, could it ever be forged? Or would everything made of it have to be cast?

  • @DymoPolska
    @DymoPolska Před 6 lety +193

    If you get punched by vibranium/black panther boxing glove does it fall of you as pathetically, as ball thrown at BP suit? Is that why he uses claws? :D

    • @GeneralKnife
      @GeneralKnife Před 6 lety +45

      Tomek Dymek No you'd still get hurt and move back due to reaction. Though the punching sound might not happen.

    • @subashchandru3
      @subashchandru3 Před 6 lety +17

      It's gonna hurt... If you get punched

    • @Rainyjax
      @Rainyjax Před 6 lety +40

      All the momentum would get sent straight into you. Vibranium, as depicted in Black Panther, stops objects relative to itself, so from the glove's perspective you'd be moving towards the glove even if you were completely stationary relative to the ground. So the glove wouldn't slow down, it'd be like getting hit with an unstoppable object.

    • @ninjahombrepalito1721
      @ninjahombrepalito1721 Před 6 lety +15

      No matter how much it is explained, its always hard to grasp. Think about it this way. If someone throws a water balloon, or one of those huge infladable gym balls, at your face, the water balloon or big ball will absorb great part of the kinetic energy, but it would still hurt.
      .
      .
      Its also possible that the suit doesn't absorb all kinetic energy. Bear with me. Lemme explain. Vibrainium might be pretty hard to deform. So it only absorbs forces powerful enough to deform it. Which is actually how bulletproof steel plates work. Vibranium is just much better at it, probably due to its durability and elasticity.

    • @blak4831
      @blak4831 Před 6 lety +16

      I feel like Vibranium (in the MCU at least) doesn't so much absorb kinetic energy as it does distribute it easily. BP's suit is specially made with absurdly advanced tech that allows this kinetic energy to be stored instead of dispersing, and also likely acts as an extremely efficient cushioning system for BP himself, one that could likely be made to prefer one direction. BP could likely have his suit immediately release the energy from the punch/kick locally as its being absorbed, effectively nullifying Vibranium's cushioning effects in that instant. Also, side note, his claws have the added benefit of being made from "Antarctic Vibranium," which (somehow) amplifies kinetic energy, likely by transferring super low-frequency vibration (like impacting an object) into super high-frequency vibration (somehow). Though the science doesn't really hold up very well to my knowledge, this allows Antarctic Vibranium in the comics to greatly weaken bonds between atoms and molecules (particularly in metals) and cut through them more easily (including lower-quality Vibranium and Adamantium), thus why he was able to scratch Cap's shield

  • @andrewdavid8746
    @andrewdavid8746 Před 6 lety

    Video suggestion: maybe you could also tinker on Mortal Kombat "physics" as well, like would it be possible to perform finishing moves like decapitate a person by just an uppercut, or ripping the head (with spine attached) by just using your bare hands? or how could Liu Kang do bicycle kicks with him just standing there, with ZERO inertia to have him travel in mid-air directly to his opponent?

  • @scbafreak
    @scbafreak Před 5 lety

    From a story perspective, this gives a lot of info about how vibranium works. All of that energy stored in the meteor from the impact is what is being used to generate electricity, as plant nutrients to make the purple heart herb, etc.

  • @zoranrokic2607
    @zoranrokic2607 Před 6 lety +3

    I just saw you on a TV show, something about busting myths. Cool AF, happy for you. Good luck in the future man!

  • @tharinduxindunilx4806
    @tharinduxindunilx4806 Před 6 lety +16

    Would ben 10 omnitrix work( 99 and more different aliens transformation)

    • @vampyricon7026
      @vampyricon7026 Před 6 lety

      Short answer: No.
      Long answer: Noooooooooo.
      I'm thinking the most probable answer is viruses but that seems pretty sketchy.

  • @tilmerkan3882
    @tilmerkan3882 Před 2 lety

    Always impressing how fast you can write mirrored letters. Thats so DaVincian.

  • @ertertert61
    @ertertert61 Před 6 lety +3

    I just wanted to point out you almost broke my heart because for a moment you had white spots on your shirt and I thought I had dead pixels

  • @Atilahunt
    @Atilahunt Před 6 lety +3

    I remember one of the marvel's animated avengers movies they state that vibranium becomes brittle for vibranium metal, and behaves more like a regular alloy/metal if exposed to or hit with gamma radiation, which I believe has been used as a common property of the material in comics as well. So wouldn't the meteor have a top layer that was originally vibranium that became like a regular meteor shell way prior to the meteor entering the atmosphere, and wouldn't that cause damage at or before impact?

    • @fadelsukoco3092
      @fadelsukoco3092 Před 6 lety

      That would be right, except that that one movie in that particular marvel continuity was the only one to have Vibranium with that property (that's the reason that Hulk was able to destroy Vibranium-armored Chitauri ships, right?). No other Marvel media of any kind has Vibranium with the brittleness caused by gamma radiation.

  • @guy_gen
    @guy_gen Před 6 lety +6

    is it possible that the Vibranium meteorite exploded when it embedded itself onto the earth's crust???... according to the comics and Shuri in the movie if T'challa surpasses the limitation it's suit can absorb, then his suit will disperse that potential energy into a somewhat compressed yet destructive kinetic energy (as seen when he expelled some o some cars in South Korea)... so what I assumed is that upon entering the earth the meteorite kept absorbing kinetic energy, along with heat and continuously gain momentum, to the point where if it exceeded it's capacity and exploded inside the earth's crust... I know it sounds silly but if you consider how early Wakandans harvested this metal, it would be pretty useless to use stone/metal tools on a rock that absorbs energy... also the topography of Wakanda gave me an idea about the exploded vibranium theory because Wakanda is located within a valley like terrain where you could possibly depict a possible meteorite impact...
    and maybe to give some additional info which may help, or give hell, to this problematic theme about Vibranium, there is another type of Vibranium which is the exact opposite of the Vibranium found in wakanda. it's called "Antarctic Vibranium" aka "Anti-Metal" another rare alloy in the Marvel universe that has particular properties that makes it different from it's Wakandan counterpart. Anti-metal actually emits a sort of energy that melts other metals, even Adamantium, and this may very well be a Catalyst that would help Vibranium in its breach towards earth... So would a Meteorite with 2 compunds, one that absorbs energy and one that desperse or melts metals, have a different effect???... I mean I could see the vibranium meteor explode above the earth separating Wakandan Vibranium from Antarctic Vibranium or even be the outermost shell of the meteorite impacting the earth creating a valley as to where wakanda would rise... but I can't say for sure, I'm not a scientist... I'm just a guy trying to be smart and lacks sleep because of my board exam reviews, notes, and take home test...
    P.S. I love this show, this is where I get my Science notes and go full on Nerd/Geek... Mabuhay...

  • @lunathemadman
    @lunathemadman Před 6 lety +1

    Awesome video man. Great job!
    I did have a thought though: citing something like Captain America's shield, and how it can bounce around, could a meteor made of Vibranium not simply bounce off the planet?

  • @cxrveyz5646
    @cxrveyz5646 Před 5 lety +1

    These videos are my physics revision

  • @MrLilKryptic
    @MrLilKryptic Před 6 lety +74

    Is having a foodgasm like in Shokugeki no Soma possible? How delicious would the food have to be to make your clothes blow off. 🤔

    • @tremor230
      @tremor230 Před 6 lety +4

      Andrew Masimore I too vote for this!!! O.O

    • @notproductiveproductions3504
      @notproductiveproductions3504 Před 6 lety +4

      Andrew Masimore it would have to be as good as sex itself

    • @tremor230
      @tremor230 Před 6 lety +4

      NOT PRODUCTIVE PRODUCTIONS to be Honest, it would just need to trigger the pleasure centers of the brain intensely enough...I think🤔🤔🤔 I am no doctor 🤣🤣🤣

    • @toxicdeath7929
      @toxicdeath7929 Před 6 lety +2

      Yee weabo squad

    • @tremor230
      @tremor230 Před 6 lety

      Matej Ravnikar where?

  • @aqacefan
    @aqacefan Před 6 lety +6

    Nice nod to Wolfram-Alpha.

    • @becausescience
      @becausescience  Před 6 lety +3

      I use it for EVERYTHING. The creator is honestly a genius. -- KH

  • @SidneyJupiter
    @SidneyJupiter Před 6 lety +2

    Can you do a video on wakanda’s shapeshifting nano particles?

  • @jonathanhall7223
    @jonathanhall7223 Před 10 měsíci

    I actually think that the reason bullets and other projectile impacts seem to bounce off of most vibranium objects isn't that vibranium fails to absorb all the kinetic force, but rather as a result of the wearer or owners own micromovements, the movement of the very atmosphere, and the atoms of the object rejecting contact with any substance that would prevent them from vibrating themselves. It's the object refusing to allow any other object to require it to stay perfectly still.

  • @ashsmash0432
    @ashsmash0432 Před 6 lety +5

    Maybe the vibranim needs to be activated

  • @eMikecs
    @eMikecs Před 6 lety +5

    10:01 You say this would be the most tame meteor impact of this size in earth history, but if every meteorit gets destroyed that has less than 25km diamater, then this is the only meteor that will make it to then into the ground, which makes it the most destructive, no?

    • @MatterBeamTSF
      @MatterBeamTSF Před 6 lety +3

      A bigger asteroid can break up and still drop a 20m wide chunk on the ground, making them massive impacts.

  • @alexdexter4753
    @alexdexter4753 Před 5 lety +1

    Perfectly spherical meteor

  • @darrenwells3490
    @darrenwells3490 Před 6 lety +1

    Lmao love your videos they get me thinking and you never fail to make me laugh along the way.

  • @oninoni
    @oninoni Před 6 lety +3

    Maybe it's 10000 Tons of refined Vibranium? Unrefined form could contain a large ammount of other elements.

  • @blackeyegraal2370
    @blackeyegraal2370 Před 6 lety +119

    How does gambits mutation powers work?

    • @AifDaimon
      @AifDaimon Před 6 lety +3

      Interesting question

    • @walkinmn
      @walkinmn Před 6 lety +1

      Interesting, according to Kyle, Black Panther uses some sort of nano-springs to transfer kinetic energy, but Gambit transfers it just with his mind right? So i imagine he has to make the atoms in whatever he's transferring the energy to a little more unstable... Something like that i guess.

    • @alexiscanfield3473
      @alexiscanfield3473 Před 6 lety +4

      If we judge just by the comic description, that he is able to manipulate their kinetic energy, Gambit might be world endingly powerful, like Juggernaut and Thor's hammer.

    • @dragonweyr44
      @dragonweyr44 Před 6 lety +4

      Gambit charges object that he throws, usually playing cards because they are numerous and inconspicuous enough to draw attention to himself, and charges them with an unknown form of explosive energy. He CAN charge up objects of almost any size with this energy but the larger and more massive the object he charges, the longer it takes to charge it and the more draining it is for him (also, the more explosive potential it has. Also, the less throwable it is so it would be a bomb instead of a conventional weapon.), which is why he prefers to stick with using playing cards.

    • @alexiscanfield3473
      @alexiscanfield3473 Před 6 lety +1

      Its always described, @dragonweyr44, as kinetic energy. Hence the question.

  • @waltersumofan
    @waltersumofan Před 6 lety

    I recall doing a toboggan problem measuring kinetic energy, so I think BP costume with kinetic energy absorption means he can't slide on snow in order to maintain equilibrium. Thus it would be like a Spider-man costume, so he could walk on walls etc. Also everything would stick to him, as you mentioned. Black Panther would be Velcro-man.

  • @KalijahAnderson
    @KalijahAnderson Před 2 lety

    I actually miss this format. This was really neat and I like this far more than 'the Facility'

  • @Albert_Wesker_1969
    @Albert_Wesker_1969 Před 6 lety +20

    Nice video Kyle.

    • @Damstraight68
      @Damstraight68 Před 6 lety

      Video not worth watching. Lore dictates the core of the planet is entirely vibranium. Not addressed

    • @snazzyfeathers
      @snazzyfeathers Před 6 lety

      Damstraight68 The fuck are you talking about? The entire core of the earth is made of vibranium? They never said that in Black Panther.

  • @joshuataylor2847
    @joshuataylor2847 Před 6 lety +3

    Hi kyle, I absolutely love what you do and I'd even go as far to say that you're probably my biggest scientific inspiration and I always love to learn something new in a way that explains pop culture science. I hope you see this cause I'd like to know who inspired you to get to where you are now?

    • @becausescience
      @becausescience  Před 6 lety +2

      That is incredibly kind of you to say Joshua, thank you. I was always a nerdy kid growing up -- my parents supported that a lot with dinosaur CD-ROMs, museum visits, LEGOs, and the like. I decided to get into sci comm in college during my engineering degree, drawing from the greats like Sagan in COSMOS, Bill Nye, and especially MythBusters. I've seen every episode, and have been fortunate enough to meet all the team. All that went a long way in making me the person I am today. -- KH

    • @MatterBeamTSF
      @MatterBeamTSF Před 6 lety +1

      The funny thing is, *you* are taking the place of your heroes for the next generation.

    • @joshuataylor2847
      @joshuataylor2847 Před 6 lety +1

      Thank you so much guys, this means so much to me and I will continue to teach as many people as I can about the beauty and intrigue of science.

  • @bentonmarcum8924
    @bentonmarcum8924 Před rokem +3

    An alien meteorite? Is there a non alien meteorite?

  • @AgentOfShield
    @AgentOfShield Před 5 lety +2

    The "space" joke was from Portla right?

  • @darkshadow54
    @darkshadow54 Před 6 lety +5

    In the comics the amount of vibrianum that struck the earth might have been that small amount that you mentioned.
    But in the movie (I'm presuming this episode was inspired because of the movie), there is a lot more vibrianum. Almost everything, including the cars, armour suits, weapons, hence even the clothes of the Wakandans have vibrianum inter-weaved with the fabric.
    Basically my point is; the amount of vibrianum in movie is probably as much as a mountain.
    Also aren't asteroids/comets made up of more than one element? I mean since when have we ever come across an asteroid or comet made up of only one element? I'm sure there would be nice, and other elements surrounded the vibrianum asteroid/comet, hence making the initial impact a lot bigger right?

    • @vampyricon7026
      @vampyricon7026 Před 6 lety

      He did mention it was only 50% vibranium, but the movie canon is significantly different.

  • @Mobile_Dom
    @Mobile_Dom Před 6 lety +7

    there is a super weird, almost white line looking mark under Kyle's chest, scratch on the lens?

    • @Timbhu
      @Timbhu Před 6 lety +3

      Un-erased marker line on the plexiglass

    • @becausescience
      @becausescience  Před 6 lety +4

      Some technical difficulties during this episode, thanks for bearing with us -- KH

  • @oharehatmancaleb7
    @oharehatmancaleb7 Před 5 lety

    Wolfram Alpha is literally the best calculations program I have ever used, 10/10 Hill.

  • @TheWah23
    @TheWah23 Před 6 lety +1

    5:57 - RHINO HAAAAAT!

  • @bigweight4723
    @bigweight4723 Před 6 lety +3

    I checked your math....you did good pretty boy....THIS TIME

  • @Tomlavery89
    @Tomlavery89 Před 6 lety +6

    in both Hellboy and Batman: death in the family, as well as many other example, characters are seen to remove a great deal of their own skin and/body parts. while this is a very grim topic, could a person actually survive having no skin?

    • @GlacialScion
      @GlacialScion Před 6 lety +3

      Tom Lavery
      I mean, assuming you didn't die of shock, you'd still only live for hardly more than few minutes. Your skin does a lot of things, and one of its primary jobs is body heat regulation. Unless your environment was within 5 or 10 degrees of baseline body temperature, you'd die of hyperthermia or hypothermia very quickly. Assuming the temperature was right, you'd then be susceptible to catastrophic fluid loss not limited to just your blood. Any of these issues would lead to multi-organ failure. If you got around that somehow, you might live long enough to hit the primary killer of burn victims (around half of the fatalities, even if treated in a hospital), which is sepsis. It would be almost impossible to keep infection at bay without the body's primary defense against it. Would be like trying to stop a waterfall with a fishing net.

  • @allanbroady2970
    @allanbroady2970 Před 6 lety +1

    Subscribed just because for the Wolfram mention.
    Kudos.

  • @knownas2017
    @knownas2017 Před 5 lety +1

    When you said Rhino, I immediately thought you were talking about the R.Y.N.O.