The physics of music: playing fire, ice and jelly trumpets - with Anna Ploszajski

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  • čas přidán 10. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 51

  • @EmilyAllan
    @EmilyAllan Před rokem +23

    Loved this. As a fellow musician and materials lover, this hit the spot. Thank you.

  • @guyh3403
    @guyh3403 Před rokem +11

    Thank you so much.
    Amazing to see those sound waves portrayed like this.

  • @chopsddy3
    @chopsddy3 Před rokem +7

    Wow! A fiery oscilloscope ! That is super cool.

  • @amdredlambda
    @amdredlambda Před rokem +3

    Who doesn't love this! That's all the fun a scientist will love to have. Love it!

  • @markseagraves5486
    @markseagraves5486 Před rokem +1

    Fantastic. Anna radiates joy and fascination. And who wouldn’t want to run around the Royal Institution in a jumpsuit making all manner of clever noises?

  • @brave_new_india_science
    @brave_new_india_science Před rokem +1

    no words to explain ,only grateful for your work !!

  • @FHM1994
    @FHM1994 Před rokem +1

    Amazing, a way to combine material physics and trumpet music, that's right up my alley. Thanks Anna!

  • @marwan75
    @marwan75 Před rokem +1

    Dr. Anna, highly honored to see someone like you in youtube. Thanks for sharing this material.

  • @mho...
    @mho... Před rokem +4

    *Fascinating* 🖖
    Fluid Dynamics & Waves are always intriguing!

  • @resh..
    @resh.. Před rokem +2

    Very, very cool...
    And wobbly.
    And burny.
    And hard.
    This was awesome!

  • @kentherapy7022
    @kentherapy7022 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Flame graphic eqalizer.......👀....Incredible

  • @TheRealPaulMarshall
    @TheRealPaulMarshall Před rokem +3

    The different materials may make the same note but they don't really make the same tone, do they?

  • @getspitfired
    @getspitfired Před rokem +3

    Analog Synthwaves. Great Idea!!!

  • @user-jg3ko8pf2r
    @user-jg3ko8pf2r Před 11 měsíci +1

    awesome and beautiful, love it to the max

  • @leswest9287
    @leswest9287 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Amazing demonstration. I played a trumpet in my youth but it wasn’t a jelly one 😂

  • @dianneledford3681
    @dianneledford3681 Před rokem +3

    Absolutely Fascinating hope to see so many many more in the future on the channel 😀

  • @slavamoshkin
    @slavamoshkin Před rokem +1

    Awesome! Delightful! So lovely, so trumpety! 🎺

  • @jemimabrennen2580
    @jemimabrennen2580 Před rokem +1

    Loved this! So well shot and edited.

  • @RGCbaseace
    @RGCbaseace Před rokem +1

    If you haven't already look into nigel Stanford (cymatics) it's very good explaining this very thing

  • @williamlewis8773
    @williamlewis8773 Před 8 měsíci

    This video would be great for inspiring young children when they first reach either the age of fire nor when they begin to study the arithmetic of whole numbers and of rational numbers and again when they study music and the Cartesian graphs of trigonometric functions and then again when they study Fourier analysis in college , if they care to do so . ... also a great science fair project if you know a plumber , a gasfitter , nor a chemistry nor physics teacher who can and will help with the apparatus .

  • @joshuasamuel2122
    @joshuasamuel2122 Před rokem

    She has a great tone!

  • @alancurtis9155
    @alancurtis9155 Před rokem

    Fascinating, thank you.

  • @aurora.3697
    @aurora.3697 Před rokem

    Fascinating

  • @vidyalankargharpure
    @vidyalankargharpure Před rokem

    Loved to listen and 'view' musical notes created by trumpet! Wo! Science is musical too! Loved the video.

  • @glacieractivity
    @glacieractivity Před rokem

    As someone with my screenname would say - Newtonian physics is still onto something even after fluid and relativity and thermo dynamics came along. We have flames to prove it. It also reminds me why I dropped the trumpet I was designated to play at the age of 8 (back in the 1970s) and opted for a chirche organ instead. Same principle, way more cool of you want to play Bach.

  • @edgeeffect
    @edgeeffect Před rokem

    When talking about metallurgy and history, lets not forget the chalcolithic period... copper is good stuff all on it's own.

  • @hudsonfluxforever
    @hudsonfluxforever Před rokem

    Splendid splendid I think she is my long lost brass horn drram I had as a young bugle blower on the gardens of Eden ❤

  • @dimension2788
    @dimension2788 Před rokem

    ❤I play a King Trumpet. I have a Legend and Tempo 600. My favorites horns! The flames parse out to regular spaces at higher notes. So these must represent standing waves yes? The note makes nodes? Love your King (Silver Flare)???

  • @richardrhee57
    @richardrhee57 Před rokem

    Genius

  • @hireality
    @hireality Před rokem

    What a wonderful video ✨👍

  • @domdoesthethings
    @domdoesthethings Před 7 měsíci

    I loved material science at uni but to this day I cannot get my head around Miller Indices and planes of crystals 😢

  • @ocdmusic
    @ocdmusic Před rokem

    lol I played trumpet for a couple of years as a kid a long time ago, started making music a couple of years ago, all electronic but I wanted to try get a few instruments to learn to play, would love a theremin one day. I want to get a flute though, played that even less than the trumpet but Id like to incorporate that. I love experimental music stuff, this is kinda similarish ish to Simon the Magpies experimentation although thats electronic mostly too.

  • @ThePeaceableKingdom
    @ThePeaceableKingdom Před rokem

    The flexible pipe and funnel resembles an instrument used in the late '3os by the band Bob Skyles and his Skyrockets. It used a flexible metal gas pipe like those used to connect space heaters to the gas mains and a metal kitchen funnel. They called it a "bazooka." The anti-tank rocket launcher used in WWII was nick-named bazooka after the Bob Skyles instrument. You can hear it being used here:
    czcams.com/video/pC4W-ECCUEc/video.html

  • @nareshkumar4207
    @nareshkumar4207 Před rokem +1

    Hi give a talk about antennas.

    • @Weaver1812
      @Weaver1812 Před rokem

      Wow. That is a really tough topic!

  • @RWBHere
    @RWBHere Před 9 měsíci

    Very interesting, but the accompanying soundtrack was completely unnecessary and distracting. Thanks for the demonstrations!

  • @billwesley
    @billwesley Před rokem

    Now I have heard the metal of long metal horns ring, if you made the different trumpets 6 feet long there might be more of a difference.

  • @GaryGraham66
    @GaryGraham66 Před rokem

    Has any one did the Rubens "cube" joke yet? It should produce s square wave sound.....I'll get my coat.

  • @maureensurdez7841
    @maureensurdez7841 Před rokem

    Dangerous music, musical fire take your pick.

  • @ANOLDMASTERJUKZ
    @ANOLDMASTERJUKZ Před rokem

    @6:35 Lead

  • @SuperHyperExtra
    @SuperHyperExtra Před rokem

    Yet, I know clarinet players who spends thousands of dollars on barrels and bells that are made of slightly different woods from each others and tells me the differences in sound are night and day...

  • @BLECHHAUS
    @BLECHHAUS Před rokem

    In the company I use the cardboard cores from foil rolls to play the didgeridoo. Then I enjoy the stupid looks of my colleagues.

  • @Hsee-r5p
    @Hsee-r5p Před měsícem

    Single Neuron in our brain is quantum computer

  • @Javier-qk7ms
    @Javier-qk7ms Před rokem

    Would love yo ser her myth busting tone woods for eléctric Guitars 😂

  • @dylanbunko340
    @dylanbunko340 Před rokem

    All those different materials and not 1 made Dubstep Sounds....😂😂😂

  • @digitalwarz
    @digitalwarz Před rokem +3

    that is sweet, but it's physics for kids. What about dynamics, momentum, entropy, etc? as a musician , these concepts i use. Nice effort though.

    • @leonidreznikov-ol2ym
      @leonidreznikov-ol2ym Před rokem +1

      Hi, can you teach me how you use entropy in music please? I want to be musician too!

  • @theDuctapeUnion
    @theDuctapeUnion Před rokem +1

    The safety glasses