*Thanks for watching.* [VIDEO CONTAINS SOME GRAPHIC IMAGES] We return to our [HALF-LIFE HISTORIES] series with a story you probably haven't heard before. The Hanoi Incident is overshadowed in history by Anatoli Burgoski, but ask yourself a question...why was the fate of the anonymous director in Hanoi so different?
@j.2111 ай бұрын
idk edit: please i don't i don't deserve um.. the no like situation... nevermind, sorry for lame replying
@kylehill11 ай бұрын
then watch @@j.21
@Boredability11 ай бұрын
Balls
@j.2111 ай бұрын
@@kylehill soon i will
@captainspaulding596311 ай бұрын
Cost cutting, and lack of concern for proper safety protocols would be my guess
@hololightful11 ай бұрын
It completely blows my mind that there wasn't something as simple as a conspicuous red light in the room that was lit when the machine was turned on...
@AsobiMedio11 ай бұрын
Soviet engineering baby.
@rijlqanturis62511 ай бұрын
Or even just a door interlock. The irradiator I uses at work has a simple mechanical switch on the door into the room, such that the machine cannot be started unless the door is closed, and will immediately trip offline if the door is opened when in operation.
@forceawakens444911 ай бұрын
@@rijlqanturis625ehh i would trust that, the other accelerator incident in this series occurred because one of those interlocks failed
@HogSlopp11 ай бұрын
@@AsobiMedio tfw u dont even watch the whole video
@jacoblojewski872911 ай бұрын
@@forceawakens4449 For sure. Any place with respectable safety measures the interlock would be a failsafe intended for if you already screwed up every other safety procedure and mechanism. And you'd be in serious trouble if you only avoided an accident due to the interlock. It'd still be an improvement in this case though.
@kayleighlehrman956611 ай бұрын
Bro got his hands irradiated, went home and they felt weird, and he was like "nah it's not the radiation, probably the arthritis"
@deepak_nigwal11 ай бұрын
the point is, you would never actually feel anything or realise anything at the moment any stream of particles or radiation pass through your body, nor your body would react to it immediately, no pain, no bite or tinging sensation. Its important to note that the beam dia of stream of particles in small scale accelerators is of few microns to less that a millimeter. If you dont know if the beam is active or not, you would never know if you hit or pass the beamline once or twice, or n number of times while working around it. It is the after effects, and scale of dosage (15:20) which decides the level of damage being done by the particle beam into the body tissues. Then you would realise that something happened to the skin and tissue a few days ago. If you know the beam is active, and you know the path of beamlines, and you still deliberately put your hand into the path, then its another story. But it would still feel like you are waving your hand in the void.
@arcan76211 ай бұрын
copium
@MegaRyuki11 ай бұрын
@@deepak_nigwalyes your body wouldnt react to it immediately but when your hands start to swell and necrotize you dont fucking think its artritis
@scottcantdance80411 ай бұрын
Told his doctor about getting irradiated while his hands were turning grey and she was like "you need dermatorogist for vitamin deficiency!!"
@edwhatshisname356211 ай бұрын
He must've been bathing in de Nile. I'll see myself out...
@jesper883611 ай бұрын
Two things 1: this man is incredibly lucky it was only his hands in front of that beam. It’s really terrible it happened at all, but at least the human body can survive without hands. 2: “antimatter annihilation” is the hardest thing I’ve heard all day
@alamrasyidi409711 ай бұрын
some radioactive decay are known to emmit antimatter particles. i guess thats the radiosignature they detected in his hands
@offbrandbiscuit11 ай бұрын
A Russian scientist had a particle beam pass through his brain but still somehow survived, shit is insane
@jesper883611 ай бұрын
@@offbrandbiscuit I watched a video about that a while back and went into it expecting the guy to be killed instantly Probably one of the craziest stories I’ve ever heard!
@aleksandarrudic369411 ай бұрын
@@alamrasyidi4097that's true, some naturally occurring radioisotopes decay by beta plus decay (emitting a positron from the nucleus), but in this case the antimatter was created by photon scattering: A high energy photon (a very hard X or gamma particle) hitting a high intensity electromagnetic field (like the one of an atomic nuclei) can, with a certain probability depending on the energy of the photon (the higher the energy, the greater the probability) scatter (exchange momentum) by producing an electron-positron pair. The positron from the pair then quicky annihilates with any of the surrounding electrons, which emits two lower energy photons of exactly the same frequency and in the exactly opposing directions, the event which can be easily detected using scintillating crystal detectors.
@aleksandarrudic369411 ай бұрын
@@offbrandbiscuitthat's mentioned in the video - the Russian guy was lucky, ironically, that his accelerator emitted a beam of particles of much higher energy which his tissue was not able to stop, so most of the particles passed through without making too much damage, plus I believe the beam was very narrowly focused.
@nightlight0x07cc6 ай бұрын
"You've irradiated your hands!" "Oh. . . Damn, okay let me go check the on the radiation measuring device. . . Oh yep, there is antimatter embedded in me actively annihilating my organic tissue. I guess I'll go home"
@quarantinetherustgod3 ай бұрын
Must be my arthritis...
@nowandaround312Ай бұрын
"My hands are getting worse so I finally got medical treatment, but doc says it's probably a vitamin deficiency and they definitely know how particle accelerators work so I won't question their diagnosis. I guess I was wrong about the cause of my symptoms...it wasn't my arthritis."
@burntbeansoupАй бұрын
Geiger counter.
@ShaquilleOatmeal-c8nАй бұрын
@@quarantinetherustgodmust have been the wind..
@jvsc787626 күн бұрын
It was an arrow he took on his knee
@ender44299 ай бұрын
Honestly the fact that somebody losing their hands is one of the worst particle accelerator incidents in history is pretty good.
@AustralianOpalRocks9 ай бұрын
I know of at least one death. But no stories were written about it
@Shadowizzmoneygang7 ай бұрын
@@AustralianOpalRocks how do you know if theres nothing written on it lmao
@CMStrawbridge7 ай бұрын
@@AustralianOpalRocksThen care to share how TF you know? WTF is the point of comments like this 🙄
@Evitaschannel7 ай бұрын
Didnt one guy get a particle through his head?
@Evitaschannel7 ай бұрын
@@CMStrawbridgeAnatoli Petrovich Bugorski
@Amadrath11 ай бұрын
As an accelerator physicist in Germany, I'm used to interlock systems, radiation bunkers, lead fortresses and the like. To think, that as late as the 1990's there were accelerator facilities with so low radiation protection standards anywhere in the world, is quite shocking to me.
@mariehuynh11 ай бұрын
Vietnam is a 3rd world country. That means it's decades behind and accepting second hand equipment.
@tillamook744611 ай бұрын
It's a nuclear physics institute run by a post-starvation, post-blockade and nearly bankrupt Communist country that absolutely had other priorities than some weird nuclear scientist's demands. To think the country had such institutes is outlandish - kind of like hearing about Zambia having a space programme.
@toolbaggers11 ай бұрын
@@tillamook7446 ...still defeated the US military.
@CrazyBrick3011 ай бұрын
As someone who has a short attention span,
@MrThunderTw11 ай бұрын
Can you then please explain to me what he's talking about in this video at 16:10 the part they "do a check for Antimatter annihilation", I think this part could be BS. Seems like a simple Geiger counter isn't what he means they used for checking if something was dosed. What does "Antimatter annihilation" even have to do with radiation exposure at that point?
@MrBeetsGaming11 ай бұрын
My friend had his hand surgically embedded in his abdomen like that after it got caught is the gears of a machine at a plastic factory, I'll never forget going to visit him and seeing that.... He had initially lost all but his pinky and ring finger and that side of his hand but they ended up having to amputate just above his elbow because of complications. He won a lawsuit against the company because the safety sensor on the machine didn't work and then he opened his own landscaping company called Captain Hooks lol.
@DocBree1311 ай бұрын
I’m glad he’s doing well!
@hx552511 ай бұрын
That’s unfortunate and badass
@disrespecc967811 ай бұрын
Buddy turned his misfortune into a fortune
@P3GProductions11 ай бұрын
Did he have a hookhand?
@rokko_fable11 ай бұрын
If it were me, I would have stopped after the amputation. No reason to have surgery putting my damaged hand into my torso. That's just weird.
@sunnygalli6 ай бұрын
I dont know why I was expecting anything other than "his hands fell off".
@troleopowers3 ай бұрын
Cus overall it should've been much worse, he was hella lucky
@ZijnShayatanicaАй бұрын
I mean... They didn't just fall off, unless you wanna use the "I didn't shoot him, I just threw the bullet REALLY REALLY FAST" mental gymnastics. His hand cells just fell onto the scalpel. 😂🤣
@sunnygalliАй бұрын
@@ZijnShayatanica I mean, they probably were going to fall off. The doctor just did it first haha. I like your perspective though, solid point.
@Mutrax470611 күн бұрын
i actually thought a particle accelerator would quite literally mean matter flying so fast, it CUTS through whatever you put there. not just xray
@KruskDerTank11 ай бұрын
The director's name is Trần Đức Thiệp (you can see his name at 13:22). He was and still is one of Vietnam's leading experts in atomic energy, and he is still healthy and well. He talked briefly about the incident in an interview, stating that (after being discharged from hospital and returning home) he initially struggled in performing daily activities but after a while he adapted to living life normally, even driving his motorbike like nothing had happened. He is a distinguished professor and still very much active in the field of nuclear physics even to this day.
@yeos_angel_11 ай бұрын
How the fuck is he considered an expert
@kageseiryuu867511 ай бұрын
@@yeos_angel_ power of hindsight?
@KruskDerTank11 ай бұрын
@@yeos_angel_ he were in his younger day when safety standard was somewhat lacking, consider that in 1992 communist Vietnam has just opened up after the USSR collapse so go figure.
@affegpus419511 ай бұрын
@@yeos_angel_well I'm sure he's not commiting the same.mistake again for sure
@BlyatifulButter11 ай бұрын
@@yeos_angel_ BREAKING NEWS, EXPERTS ARE ACTUALLY ONCE NEWBIES WHO HAD TO GO THROUGH TRIAL AND ERROR!!!! Please use your brain next time instead of asking dumb shit like that, jfc
@the-digital-idiot11 ай бұрын
11:40 I know not all Uranium is radio active, but the idea of using Uranium to block radiation is still very funny to me.
@nicholasneyhart39611 ай бұрын
I mean, technically, all Uranium is radioactive, but so is every element from Bismuth or heavier.
@kylehill11 ай бұрын
*depleted
@jakobc.255811 ай бұрын
Whats even funnier is that uranium is actualy _the best_ material for stopping radiation because it is the most dense material we have. Edit: So apparently I am wrong and depleted uranium is not the single most dense material we have. However, it is still one of the most dense and it is also one of the most viable for construction because the other ones are too expensive or will kill you (lead specificaly).
@jwenting11 ай бұрын
@@kylehillDepleted Uranium is still radioactive, but the radiation levels are so low they're at or below background radiation in most of the world. Still DU plating and other items are always painted or otherwise coated, but that's mostly because Uranium Oxides are highly toxic (chemically), this also as a side effect blocks any alpha emissions.
@soundspark11 ай бұрын
On one side, you have some alpha particles and a little bit of gamma rays. On the other side you have lethal electron beams and X-rays. Which side do YOU want to be on?
@blankityblankblank232111 ай бұрын
As far as nuclear accidents go, the man was probably lucky. Losing both your hands is not cheap but far better than what has been covered by this channel in the past.
@The_Keeper11 ай бұрын
Yup. Imagine if he had put his head down there to "eye-ball" it. He would have had his brain leaking from his ears and nose within an hour.
@MySerpentine11 ай бұрын
@@The_Keeper There was a video about that too.
@nguyentandung4211 ай бұрын
@@MySerpentinehe got lucky that his head was too soft to stop the particle. If it did deliver the full radioactive payload he would be extremely dead.
@_Jay_Maker_11 ай бұрын
@@The_KeeperYeah, that's happened. He survived!
@Tyrone-Ward11 ай бұрын
I’m pretty sure dying is cheaper than losing both of your hands.
@knowledgetracker5 ай бұрын
My best friend is a nuclear health physicist and the stories she has provided me are incredible. One of the most notable is the tsunami that hit Japan and caused the nuclear facility meltdown. The men that continued to work in that facility to minimize the catastrophe knew they were going to die as soon as they got irradiated, but they continued to work for the next 24 hours. They were basically walking corpses. These men were heroes. It was a painful death.
@joes.21115 ай бұрын
So were these unreported deaths? Because officially, there were no fatalities due to radiation contamination. Fuckishma is not chernobyl. Their reactors had containment structures that were much more robust.
@Kaiju33015 ай бұрын
This is anti-nuclear propaganda. As of 2024, no one has died directly from radiation exposure at Fukushima.
@Kaiju33015 ай бұрын
This is anti-nuclear propaganda. As of 2024, no one has died directly from radiation exposure during the Fukushima disaster.
@valtersmednis1435 ай бұрын
What? At Fukushima there were zero deaths from acute radiation syndrome, and so far, 13 years later, there has been only one cancer death confirmed to be linked to the radiation.
@abusethesun4 ай бұрын
This is false. Only one person died from radiation from the accident and that was 4 years later so hardly a "walking corpse"
@kirbcake11 ай бұрын
imagine STICKING YOUR HAND IN A PARTICLE BEAM GOING THE SPEED OF LIGHT, and when your hand feels weird a few hours later, you just think, "Huh! Weird! Must be my arthritis."
@EaglesQuestions11 ай бұрын
Sounds more like denial, to me. To be fair though, what were they going to do with earlier diagnosis? What other treatments?
@fish_bacon11 ай бұрын
Then when it start to rot from the inside ... "have some vitamins!"
@formallydehyde11 ай бұрын
That's just what having chronic illness is like tbh. It's hard to gauge when something is unusually wrong if pain/discomfort is your baseline.
@quokka_1111 ай бұрын
Exaggerate much? It's only like 99.999999879% of the speed of light.
@catherinebaldwin658011 ай бұрын
I can understand the doc not knowing what to do since radiation wasn’t that well known at the time, but, um. His hands are black…
@Tango_Mike11 ай бұрын
Being a mere enthusiast who isn't even good at physics, I really can't state how much this channel has taught me about radiation. Thank you so much for the amazing content!
@RCAvhstape11 ай бұрын
Hopefully you're better at it than the poor guy who lost his hands.
@lolnothanksbill11 ай бұрын
❤
@dumbbirdwayne11 ай бұрын
Same, I don’t fully understand all the maths and photon level stuff, but man it’s fascinating to me how a naturally occurring material can cause so much destruction to humans, not once or twice, but so many times
@taimatsuko3 ай бұрын
Ditto!
@graymonk597211 ай бұрын
“assuming that if you can’t feel something, nothing is happening” is such a dangerous idea. i can’t feel pain very well due to my medications (for nerve pain, so yes this is intended) but that also means i can’t feel infections until they’re severe. i had an abscess in my gums for 2 weeks before i realized since i just couldn’t feel the pain. it’s something everyone should learn, that just because something doesn’t hurt, doesn’t mean it’s all alright
@catherinebaldwin658011 ай бұрын
Oh. I feel that. My brother I swear can’t feel pain. As a kid he would jump out his window onto the bush to play at night. He completely broke his pinkie and only went to the doc after showing mom it can now bend in this direction. And he also had an infection on his tooth and had to be removed. The stinker.
@LaCazaLP11 ай бұрын
Same reason why we usually do Medical Check ups every few years. Just because you doesnt feel it doesnt mean there is some kind of Cancer growing in you. Do regular Check Ups Guys. There are People who would miss you.
@JaneFlowerbird10 ай бұрын
Aaand now I’m back to having anxiety about having cancer in my ovaries…..
@yasininn7610 ай бұрын
@JaneFlowerbird cancer has telltale that aren't painful. If you're scared, go to a doctor (unless you live in the US, then chemio might be less costly)
@cyruahawkins52899 ай бұрын
I genuinely thought like this once, like perhaps living without pain would be nice, but then you’d never know what’s wrong with you. It’s like emotions too, it’s good you have them, like being sad or mad cause they tell you, you deserve better or things like what’s right and wrong.😅 Idk, I used to think heaven would be like you never get sad or feel pain but thinking about life like that seems kinda dumb. Like be thankful for your senses. 😂
@HuyenNguyen-wt4sj7 ай бұрын
I was born and raised in Hanoi, Vietnam. Accidentally, i found some your videos about radioactive energy. They actually widened my horizons. Even though I've lived in Hanoi since I was young, I just know this now. Thank you for your sharing useful knowledge
@amaiaa88153 ай бұрын
This video in particular is misleading. 90% of it is just radiation damage due to an xray machine which is found in every hospital and dental clinic. Not a particle accelerator.
@m420-nd1if3 ай бұрын
Vietnam is great. I have a date with a Vietnamese scientist soon.
@le_bandito13 күн бұрын
Don’t put your hands in her particle accelerator
@izzatihassan147511 ай бұрын
Man was told he put his hands in while the machine was on. "Ugh my hands feel weird. Must be that damn arthritis acting up again"
@cavalierliberty683811 ай бұрын
Damn you arthritis!
@toolbaggers11 ай бұрын
He even measured himself to be radioactive!
@SearinoxNavras11 ай бұрын
This man needed immediate, aggressive interventions and grafts to begin replacing tissue in his hands with healthy tissue from other parts of his body before the existing, compromised cells reached end of life wear and required replacements from descendants that would be either highly dysfunctional, or not exist at all. Bone and muscle have slow enough turnover giving him precious time to act, unfortunately he decided that if he refused to grasp the gravity of what had happened and ignored it, it would all somehow go away.
@samius114911 ай бұрын
@@SearinoxNavras Is that an actual medical procedure? Any idea what it's called? I can't find much about it via google & I thought grafts often fail with radiation damage.
@jjasper751211 ай бұрын
Yep, I wonder what his thought process was....it's staggering that he was in charge, I wouldn't want him in charge of my coffee let alone that facility. It doesn't take a scientist or have any qualifications to know if you put your hands where they shouldn't be, i.e boiling water, acid, fire or anything radioactive then you're fucked, not oh well let's carry on!
@Mexican00b11 ай бұрын
i mean... the scientist himself took almost a month to look for help... that tells you a lot about their safety and health standards.. a scientist who studied particle accelerators decided to go "nah, ill be fine"
@chevronlily11 ай бұрын
To be fair it's not like it would have done much
@xadierz181611 ай бұрын
Guy really did a gojo
@MrViki6011 ай бұрын
Back then when men were real men.
@rcutler911 ай бұрын
He did tell a doctor about it and they didn't think it was an issue lol
@alexturnbackthearmy190711 ай бұрын
@@chevronlily It fucking would. The faster you treat, the easier it will be in the future, dude hands were literally rotting alive.
@MM-sx7zs11 ай бұрын
0:20 I love how the chart has an "Unknown" for the Rad level, like the people charting it all just got tired of walking and said 'fuk it, leave it blank' and just went home.
@Blackwing234563511 ай бұрын
Unknown for electronics looks funnier, lol
@therookiegamer272711 ай бұрын
@@Blackwing2345635 Are there electronics there? IDK, there might be, but I can't be bothered to check, my shift ends in 10
@MrRedwires11 ай бұрын
Having worked at CERN, I can basically tell you that it's like that. Or... More like a "We never checked, didn't need to so far, and it'd probably be annoyingly expensive to do so :P" Trust me, the radiation safety down there is a LOT better than this though.
@nxptvneee3 ай бұрын
@@MrRedwiresholy shit you worked at CERN?
@Akrna476 ай бұрын
Losing your hands to "antimatter annihilation" sounds pretty metal.
@Chris-cf1hs3 ай бұрын
Actually it sounds pretty rad
@LilyEvans19963 ай бұрын
@@Chris-cf1hslol shut up 😂
@ComaLies225Ай бұрын
The director is still working and doing his thing which is pretty bada/$&
@ZijnShayatanicaАй бұрын
@@Chris-cf1hsThat sounds like a grey area to me... But humour is relative. 🤓
@berong9111 ай бұрын
1992 is literally just one year after Vietnam's economy started to take off. The poor equipment and protections for science were not something new, and back then they probably received very little budget. The crazy thing is this incident is literally unknown by the population. The news definitely tried to hide it as much as they could.
@imbutter_s11 ай бұрын
I'm Vietnamese and I didn't even know we had particle accelerators...
@NguyenNguyen-mp7hc11 ай бұрын
@@imbutter_s Same here. My co-worker watched this video and told me about it. My first reaction was thinking " we dont have a particle accelerator. Must be very recent". Nope, 1992.
@BigM_TV11 ай бұрын
Honestly if a country isn't well off enough to comfortably fully fund it, they shouldn't be spending money on stuff like this
@vuhoangnhatanh87911 ай бұрын
tried so hard to find news about the incident but the only thing found was a foreign report :(
@badgoogle450911 ай бұрын
tbf, it probably wasn't being hidden, one person slowly battling a disease that ultimately took 8 of their fingers isn't much of a news story. Even being due to a particle accelerator, I imagine the cultural understanding in the world in 1992 of particle accelerators was extremely low, no less a developing country.
@ryshalverson354111 ай бұрын
You’re walking down the street when you see a guy with pirate hooks to replace his hands. He tells you his old hands were annihilated by anti-matter because he decided to mess with radioactive material without any precautions because he’s just that fearless. This is not a guy you mess with.
@realkekz11 ай бұрын
Sure he is, dumb bastard hasn't got any hands!
@karthiksnayak11 ай бұрын
Or he’s just that dumb.
@rencart11 ай бұрын
AND now he has weapons for hands, definitely stay on his good side...
@StarSailor134311 ай бұрын
Idk homie his silence after hearing what happened to his hands sounds pretty fearful,,
@Che1seabluesdrogba1111 ай бұрын
He has no hands, he’s not gonna do shit
@AyyyJeyyy11 ай бұрын
I don’t rewatch TV shows, I just watch half-life histories on repeat. I have no idea why, but this is my comfort series. (Definitely has something to do with the immaculate craftsmanship)
@shadowproductions96911 ай бұрын
I think that and Kyle's soothing, somber tone is very relaxing
@duaneb19311 ай бұрын
Watching Kyle's videos, and the manner in which he presents all of the information that he does has made it very difficult to watch almost all of the other creators out there. Like you, I go back and watch them time and time again - sometimes picking up little tidbits that I missed the first time.
@__-tp4tm11 ай бұрын
At most I re-watch Pongsifu or Ssethtzeentach. The latter definitely didn't force me to say this.
@dark2023-1lovesoni11 ай бұрын
Mine is Star-Trek: Next-Gen, for very similar reasons.
@rush1er11 ай бұрын
NERD! Ha ha ha ha! Yer a friggin' nerd that's why...... so am I except I'm not a smart nerd. I'm just weird
@Kyb3rS3 ай бұрын
3:46 as a german guy once said
@blubberingbuffoons2 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@ZijnShayatanicaАй бұрын
HAHAHAHAH
@gabrielgreen9883Ай бұрын
Made me laugh like cray cray thx dude hahahahahaha
@Gwynsladle11 күн бұрын
Smh 😂😂😂
@danwhite322411 ай бұрын
The cabling and ducting in the "maze" (or labyrinth as we often call it in the industry) can be an absolute nightmare to deal with sometimes! The large coax and SWA cables can be awful to route and often require whole sections of the concrete blocks to be removed in order to install them...
@jwenting11 ай бұрын
and worse, depending on the cabling the angles may be limited, requiring more complex duct designs.
@hasnopants11 ай бұрын
Babe, a new Half Life Histories dropped!
@fatdawg2111 ай бұрын
THIS EXACTLY HOW I FELT LMFAO LETS GOOOOOOOO
@tylera.286911 ай бұрын
😂 My words exactly. Then I danced.
@Mustombrider11 ай бұрын
"What do you mean overcha..."
@kormannn111 ай бұрын
The wrong hand in the wrong place can make all the difference in the world
@solidsnake43411 ай бұрын
I set aside time of my day to sit and watch this
@Pocket-Calculator8 ай бұрын
"I was irradiated by a particle accelerator" "Just drink some vitamins and see a dermathologist" Vietnamese medicine.
@baileyanderson68243 ай бұрын
“put some tiger balm on it”
@UserNameAnonymous11 ай бұрын
"I can't read the manual. There's nothing in the room to tell me if the machine is on. We have no sensors to tell me if I'm being blasted with radiation anywhere in the facility. Maybe we should be cautious and think about this....nah, FIRE IT UP!"
@brothercoconut659911 ай бұрын
They can read it for sure - the thing cause this to happened is neglected the very basic aspect of "is it on or off" before shit happened...
@alexturnbackthearmy190711 ай бұрын
@@brothercoconut6599 As if they would. All this stuff was specified in soviet manuals as well, and they also had all needed systems (even if they were not well maintained - watch another particle accelerator episode).
@johnrajtar982911 ай бұрын
We are nothing more than monkees with power tools. The more dangerous something is , the more we have to f@$k around and find out!
@markmcgoveran681110 ай бұрын
Do you remember that giant job fair America through the Vietnam job fair they spent a lot of money to get all these things built in Vietnam during the job fair like the deep sea port and the big are strips and now they have a lot of commercial money there and not too many concerns about OSHA or safety.
@brothercoconut659910 ай бұрын
@@alexturnbackthearmy1907 and how do you know that they do not know russian?
@bazzfromthebackground369611 ай бұрын
I thought I had somehow seen this video already, and then I realized I was just remembering the Anatoli Burgorski video. If I had a nickel for every time somebody stuck a body part in a particle accelerator I'd have two nickels which isn't a lot, but it's weird that it happened twice 😅
@crashstudi0s11 ай бұрын
I would bet is higher than two, but so far we only have heard of these
@hyakushiki440611 ай бұрын
that is until a third nickel dropped at your feet. though that would be unlikely. right...?
@ptonpc11 ай бұрын
You may have seen the video from Plainly Difficult! about two years ago "A Brief History of: The Hanoi Electron Accelerator Accident (Documentary)" He includes the sources so you can read the reports. EDIT: There is a lot more info in PD's video and since he links to the reports, you can see it was more 'spicy' than this video makes it out. Also the director's name is known and appears in some of the photos.
@Anon2653511 ай бұрын
I've only seen it happen twice But particle beams are mighty nice Chuck fried his hands like shrimp and rice Neutrons stick to kids
@sdfkjgh11 ай бұрын
Yeah, I thought this question was already answered by Comrade Bugorski. Please tell me this wasn't a "Hold m'beer" moment! EDIT: Having just watched the vid, I can safely conclude that the way the director handled his irradiation was infinitely more stupid than any "Hold m'beer" moment could ever hope to achieve. 🤦
@SpiritHawk711 ай бұрын
7:10 Thankfully the assistant was smart and ran to the control room first and not into the active accelerator room.
@stephanekaufmann4118 ай бұрын
Smarter than the « Director »
@MrDdz7 ай бұрын
@@stephanekaufmann411 as a Vietnamese I'm not surprised. Stare run scientific labs are led by ignorant, skill-less people who had "connections" and wanted an easy yet still high paying job. In this case, this lab was just there to do experiments for the sake of doing experiments.
@E.Hunter.Esquire6 ай бұрын
But if they went into the accelerator room, it would have been faster 😮
@SpiritHawk76 ай бұрын
@@E.Hunter.Esquire No. If the assistant went it, it would have exposed the assistant as well. It’s faster and safer for everyone to run to the control room to turn off the machine than to waste time searching for someone and then having to explain to them their error as the machine continues to irradiate them.
@Azuraila6 ай бұрын
@@SpiritHawk7I figured this was a joke on the word accelerator, which would be funny lol
@marvinhadley20843 ай бұрын
Kyle, haven’t had a chance to watch a Kyle video for a couple years. You have really hit the mark on content and quality. Way to go Kyle. Simple enough for the non-nukes to grasp but not oversimplified. The pace, voice, and graphics are spot on. It’s nice to see your number of subscribers has trended in the right direction as well.
@Djorin11 ай бұрын
Another factor contributing to the survival in the case of head injury is probably that the brain has little to no active cellular mitosis going on, so is far less susceptible to radiation damage. This can also explain the swelling mostly limited to the soft tissues and the bald spot on the back of the head.
@DocBree1311 ай бұрын
Great point
@kosmosXcannon11 ай бұрын
So the brain doesn't really grow anymore or something and that prevents radiation damage from spreading?
@obviouslyanonymous11 ай бұрын
I was thinking this at first as well. Never knew about the different displacement of energy between types of beams; very interesting stuff.
@Koozwad11 ай бұрын
Depends on the type of radiation. The brain is very sensitive to cellphone radiation, for example. Brain tumours are quite easily formed with overexposure - especially with children as their skulls are thinner/softer. I always have to cringe hard when a parent gives their young child a tablet or smart(dumb)phone.
@kopazwashere11 ай бұрын
@@Koozwadthere's a quite a bit of difference in intensity and frequency used on a typical mobile device compared to a particle accelerator, buddy. Best, An EE.
@theentityknownonlyaschad158411 ай бұрын
I find it hilarious that I got an ad saying “if your happy and you know it clap your hands” right when you said the scientist lost both of his hands. The KZbin algorithm has a fucked up sense of humor and I’m all here for it
@WildmanTrading11 ай бұрын
What
@jamesogden775611 ай бұрын
AI content relationships are weird. 😅
@PrinceIsot11 ай бұрын
Once I clicked on a police pew pew video and a body armor ad popped up 🫡 I did laugh out loud
@gawainethefirst11 ай бұрын
@@PrinceIsotDonut Operator? I love his content.
@PrinceIsot11 ай бұрын
@@gawainethefirst i do follow him too but it was actually Police Activity. That's what was surprising
@matthewcarpenter471611 ай бұрын
KYLE!!!! I teach radiography and this video is perfect for my students! The explanation of radiation protection is perfect! The graphs are on point for showing the levels of radiation compared to what they will be producing in the clinic! Thank you so very much for posting this content. A link is going on my LMS for them NOW!
@lays_bbq_chips629911 ай бұрын
You seem like such a passionate teacher! We need more like you !
@thetruthisoutthere517311 ай бұрын
I think you meant "radiology", not radiography
@matthewcarpenter471611 ай бұрын
@@thetruthisoutthere5173 No. I meant RADIOGRAPHY. There is a difference. I promise.
@matthewcarpenter471611 ай бұрын
@@lays_bbq_chips6299 Thank you! I can honestly say I do not hear that very often. It means a lot to me.
@catherinebaldwin658011 ай бұрын
Man I hope I as passionate as you when I become a professor. I know my students wouldn’t be with the “hellfire” that is math.
@Moonlight_Tide8 ай бұрын
I really like these more seriously narrated videos you do. I can fall asleep to them with how calm your voice is.
@awesomehpt893811 ай бұрын
That’s nothing I bet. Kyle can expose himself to a dying star at nidavellir and come out alive.
@Yewtewba11 ай бұрын
I understood that reference
@Essex12151411 ай бұрын
I think I saw that happen... Seems I can picture this too easily.
@Conundrum19111 ай бұрын
most of that energy did hit the forge though, so the physics tracks.....
@Volundur956711 ай бұрын
Marvel has interesting interpretations of Norse realms. Niðavellir is no exception.
@concordemakesvideos107011 ай бұрын
I hear that if you do it for long enough you get a cool prize
@jypsridic11 ай бұрын
He dismissed his hand issues as arthritus after knowing he'd been irradiated in the hands? That is the craziest part of this story. If it was me I'd be at the hospital in 10 minutes max, but I'd also assume that literally everything that went even slightly bad was because my hands were trying to kill me now. 'caught a red light? must be the radiation. '
@bsnow30411 ай бұрын
And the doctor recommended vitamins when he mentioned he'd probably been irradiated?
@Zitsanrael111711 ай бұрын
I completely agree with you, but I think it's also important to remember this was over 30 years ago, when the internet was still in its infancy, information wasn't nearly as readily available as it is today, and the safety culture surrounding nuclear engineering wasn't anywhere near as sophisticated as it is today. At that time, I doubt that anyone outside the USSR had even heard the name "Anatoli Burgorski" before, let alone knew what had happened to him.
@JohnnyAFG8111 ай бұрын
Denial is a powerful feeling. He didn’t think it was a big deal. Or if he did he easily to stupid to understand.
@mikelarin803711 ай бұрын
@@bsnow304as someone who spends much of his time in Vietnam, not much has changed. Had someone that was rock climbing in ha long bay fall improperly into the water and was complaining of back pain. Brought to the local doctor and was told to take a nap and drink water. When this person got back to their home country x rays would show that his spine was fractured. The level of " walk it off ism" here is insane to me.
@jypsridic11 ай бұрын
@@Zitsanrael1117 they knew enough to have a lead maze to protect themselves from secondary exposure, and he knew he just got primary exposure.
@DarkMagicianMan2011 ай бұрын
Being a Vietnamese and this story was in the 1992, it not surprise me at all. Even though now we have safety measure but due to lack of resources and malpractices, accidents happens all the time.
@tosyl_chloride11 ай бұрын
Just do things the familiar way you've always done, standards and procedures be all damned ;p Such is the Vietnamese style.
@destituteanddecadent910611 ай бұрын
One question. Why did the director and other staff not do anything until 24 days later, when his hand was falling apart? They were clearly extremely concerned when it happened. Was there just no point in intervening in an irradiation incident? And the annual checkup doctor 🤦🏻♀️ Referring him to a _dermatologist?_ Couldn't he have demanded an expert look at it, if the HINP didn't have one on hand? Edit: ok that was a bit more than one question.
@DarkMagicianMan2011 ай бұрын
@@destituteanddecadent9106 kyle did explain this in the video. "A developing country, using foreign machinary without manual with local language, lack of safety procedures, lack of resources". This incident probably the reason why my nation atomic technology never develop and probably never will. It a sad but true reality
@minhtoriwt11 ай бұрын
@@DarkMagicianMan20 you surely do underestimate scientists and experts in this country doing their best for the sake of your people. Dalat Nuclear Research Institute is and will continue to carry out researches and supply radioisotopes and radiopharmaceuticals for hospitals throughout the country. Just please don't assume boldly the ability of other people based on your limited knowledge and spitting it as if those were the matter of facts
@DarkMagicianMan2011 ай бұрын
@@minhtoriwt I'm sorry if i offended you because my reply not stated clearly this is just my opinion. I didn't mean Vietnam not have ANYTHING to do with nuclear related research, but we still don't have the capability to build, maintain a nuclear reactor( this is what I mean in atomic tech). I trust many Vietnamese like me want our nation to forward our understanding of the atom. Also I use the word "Probably" so I still believed.
@silverback10173 ай бұрын
8:08 "At this point, he knew he had &#@%@! up......"
@SanjanaRanasingha2 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@Peptuck11 ай бұрын
It's amazing how often both the victims and doctors involved initially dismiss radiation accidents like this as nothing serious at first, and only realize just how bad things are days or weeks later.
@Cu_tea_party11 ай бұрын
I think the fact that whatever happens from then on is inevitable anyway also plays a role in that, there's nothing they can do to reverse the irradiation, so there's no point doing anything except treat the symptoms as they appear, might as well try going on as normal as long as they have left to do so
@MarkArandjus11 ай бұрын
Scientist: So, um, I put my hands in a particle accelerator, they've been irradiated AND ARE TURNING GREY. Doctor: Meh, you just need some vitamins 👍
@ohalee-nkwochachijioke762411 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂
@WadUp124711 ай бұрын
“He need some milk”
@MissesWitch11 ай бұрын
no doubt needed some mineral oils
@BotWhisperer11 ай бұрын
And he just agreed and went back to work anyways says a lot about his brain power
@yeahah361711 ай бұрын
@@BotWhisperer wtf was he supposed to do? It's old Vietnam, hospitals won't be able to do shit about an irradiated limb other than just amputating it. So he just accepted his faith and went home
@carelessdreamer11 ай бұрын
This really reminds me of the tuna canning incident. People don’t even think about safety until someone gets hurt. And even then, people forget why it’s important, and some poor rando has to pay for it.
@JustShotsForMeh11 ай бұрын
Every safety law is written in blood.
@MEMyselfandIKN198411 ай бұрын
Googled it; shouldn’t have done. At least I know what my nightmares will be about tonight 😳
@transcyberism145911 ай бұрын
Reminds me of a story I heard from an old employer (in the context of a safety brief). I used to work for the manufacturer of spiral conveyor belts - house-sized contraptions that move a conveyor along a circular path, usually either inside a blast freezer or a proofing oven. luckily in this accident no one got cooked or frozen unlike the tuna incident, but it was pretty grisly, so, fair warning: I'm about to describe an industrial accident, as it was described to me. The machine in question - the conveyor spiral - basically operates by winding the belt horizontally around a large metal cage like a spool of thread. The cage rotates, and the cage itself is actually what drives the motion of the belt - there is a central motor in it that turns it so that the belt is not under too much tension (rather than just pulling on the belt, which would snap it). but when you are installing the new belt, it's tricky to get it on - you can't just yank on it, you'll never be able to pull hard enough even if snapping the belt wasn't a concern. You have to get the cage turning at the same time as mild tension is applied to the belt to keep it from slipping off. And because this is a very big machine, you can't just do that from the outside and run around - it's too wide and tall. So you have to be up inside the cage to do this, and you need to have a couple of helpers manually turning the cage by hand, and this has to be pretty well coordinated. Apparently, from what I gather, the install team did not have helpers turning the cage manually. Instead, they just turned on the motor. But the thing about this motor is that it absolutely will not stop turning unless a tremendous force is applied to it. It's a low-speed, high torque motor meant to drive something that weighs at least a couple tons. If you catch a body part between the rotating cage and the stationary frame, the motor won't even hesitate to crush you. And that's exactly what happened - but it wasn't a body part, it was a whole torso. Apparently the person inside the cage and the person on the controls had not coordinated well enough, and the person inside was not fully inside when the motor went on - they were halfway through climbing up. I heard they got sliced fully in half, right across the midsection.
@JustShotsForMeh11 ай бұрын
@@transcyberism1459 Fucking hell.
@hahaweee38917 күн бұрын
"What happens if you put your hand in a particle accelerator?" You'd probably lose it.
@sglazekkg687511 ай бұрын
One thing that has always fascinated me with radioactivity accidents (thankfully not this case because only his hands got hit) is the idea that you could see a flash, know you are a dead man walking, but feel zero pain at first. Thinking of incidents like the demon core accidents where the nuclear physicists were smart enough to know they had just been killed hundreds of times over but having to wait for the agonizing process of their body catching up to what their minds knew. If it were me I’d probably seek ways to remove myself painlessly on my own terms immediately, if I were, say, Slotkin.
@SpaghettiEnterprises11 ай бұрын
Truly horrifying fate. I like to think at least some of them wanted to make their sacrifice useful to humanity, and so decided to let things run their course for the sake of scientific discovery
@robg52110 ай бұрын
I’ve worked in the electrical distribution industry for 38 years dealing with voltages from 11,000v to 132,000v and have known a couple of engineers who have died similar to this. An electric arc flash from a fault at EHV voltages can burn at over 22,000 degree C, [the surface of the Sun burns at 5500 degrees C] But one of the most dangerous things associated with this is the microwave radiation blast that is produced along with it. If you are caught at close range in one of these Arc flashovers without protective clothing it is a death sentence. At close range The heat of the flash melts and vaporises metal, clothing and flesh. You receive 3rd degree burns over your body. But the trouble is that the radiation blast that is produced in effect microwaves and cooks your internal organs. So you are alive lying in your hospital bed, covered on burns and waiting to die as your internal organs slowly start to fail one by one. And there is nothing anyone can do about it. The last I knew one happened in the 1990s, an engineer I knew made an horrendous error, [he accidentally left some electrical test probes plugged to a 33,000volt circuit breaker housing] He turn the system back on so those exposed probes became live,…. The following day he went into the C/breaker housing to adjust a mechanism, he failed to notice the probes were still in and flashed over against their live terminals. The most awful thing was that he had a trainee with him and while being loaded into the ambulance he told the trainee that he knew he was going to die.
@ender44299 ай бұрын
@@robg521 I think I part of what he was talking about in this situation is that you know you are dead but you feel perfectly fine. No pain or visible damage to the body, just the knowledge you are doomed.
@coryb84329 ай бұрын
@@SpaghettiEnterprisesI don't know if it's that exquisite I think at the end of the day you could tell people that they have no chance of surviving and they would still go through most of the treatments to try to survive
@flannaz37699 ай бұрын
@@robg521and yet hospitals and governments make you suffer through it because unlike with animals they make it illegal to assist in your passing.
@LegendWolfA11 ай бұрын
Wow, gotta say the intro is sick. Also surprises me that this is an incident happened where I was born (Hanoi) but Ive never heard of it, so thank you Kyle for bringing it to my attention. I know a high school teacher there who does nuclear physics, and he shared that he was actually going to study to become a nuclear scientist and helped the country build its first nuclear power plant, but after incidents like this one and the Chernobyl meltdown, the plan was cancelled due to concerns of safety and risks of meltdown. Very interesting video overall, looking forward to see whats next.
@tosyl_chloride11 ай бұрын
Never heard of this incident as well, but you can google the professor's name (13:20 - Trần Đức Thiệp). Maybe this is only known in nuclear physicists' circles.
@carpemkarzi11 ай бұрын
Thank you for these. As a former Nuc med tech, safety is pounded into our brains and we were not dealing with accelerators. It is also baffling that those literally studying the effects of the X-rays on a sample had so little concept of what there were dealing with. As you mentioned , if they can’t feel anything, nothing is happening…sigh.
@BarefootCM11 ай бұрын
Its not totally surprising that they didnt appreciate the necessity of all the structural and logistical safety issues as after all: theyre just procedural, structural and such at least one step removed. What i find totally baffling is that anyone competent enough to actually gain anything from particle acceleration research would not appreciate the need to go to a hospital immediately and instead takes a "wait and see" approach.
@theshry3 ай бұрын
@5:43 "...can do everything by.... hand" nice
@jacoblojewski872911 ай бұрын
Hearing the serious lack of safety controls and procedures in these accidents is always eye opening to me. I remember doing radiography (a form of non-destructive testing) at my facility once. Everyone but essential personnel were removed, even when the source was in its enclosure. Extra shielding was installed. Extra radiation monitoring was done both before and during movement of the source from enclosure to its testing target (the x-ray source was moved remotely along a track). Signage was placed on all entrances, announcements made over the announcing circuits both before and periodically during the testing. All personnel in the affected area had to wear additional dosimetery with audible alarms (our usual dosimetery was long-term passive devices read once a month) both during the tests and when the source was secured. And our usual dosimetry was read daily even though involved sending it to a separate building, precluding us doing any work while it was being read. You don't mess around when radiation is involved. Remember TDS - Time, Distance, Shielding? Well you can't do crap about Time and Distance if you have no knowledge at all about when and where the radiation is. And Shielding can be ineffective without *testing* it with radiation measurements to ensure it's doing what you think it's supposed to be doing.
@ashrowan214311 ай бұрын
Im just imagining strolling into a dermatologists office and saying "heeey so my hands where irradiated and I was told to come see you"
@Alistorshenanigans11 ай бұрын
I would never expect seeing Vietnam in Kyle Hills video, not the literal city where I was born and its not about Pho but about partical accelerator accident??? This is so cool
@anngo414011 ай бұрын
On Lunar New Year no less!
@sendthis948011 ай бұрын
I wanna open a Pho restaurant and call it “Pho King Delicious”
@Milehighssc528011 ай бұрын
You are not original @@sendthis9480
@Weirdkauz8 ай бұрын
We be like that. Need to be held in check. I used to ride home in the same bus as an electrician working in my university's nucelar power plant. He joked about dropping his screwdriver into "that thing, tried to fish it out, but couldn't reach it, hahaha" he decided to not alert anyone, telling me "there's heaps of stuff down there"...
@Lurch-Bot7 ай бұрын
What university has a nuclear power plant? Seriously, if you're gonna BS people, at least do it right. The only nuclear reactor I've ever heard of at a university was the Chicago Pile back during the early days of the US nuclear project in WWII and it was quickly dismantled after they did their experiments. The only way they were even allowed to do it there was because there was a major war on. These days, fuggheddaboudit. The scary thing is they can work on inventing the quantum bomb with reckless abandon because universities definitely have particle accelerators. If a nuclear bomb only needs 10kg of plutonium, imagine how little mass is required on the quantum level to initiate a catastrophic chain reaction. Surprised there isn't a black hole swallowing us as I type.
@Weirdkauz6 ай бұрын
@@Lurch-Bot sorry, no time to eead the hole post. The Johannes Gutenberg University in Mainz, Germany, has a nuclear thingy on its campus. It's no secret, google it.
@quntface151810 ай бұрын
"Part of my body was inside an active particle accelerator for an extended amount of time" "Vitamin deficiency"
@hoyschelsilversteinberg45219 ай бұрын
Vietnam Efficiency
@s.hicks72139 ай бұрын
😂
@marisawoods8 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@AnonSukhoi30MKI8 ай бұрын
"Here, have some vitamin gummy bears"
@jeanpitre57898 ай бұрын
To be fair, it's really not that far fetched to think a doctor wouldn't have the slightest idea what that actually entails. They are DOCTORS not PHYSICISTS!
@MrEnjoivolcom111 ай бұрын
It’s like on BREAKING BAD where Gayle was saying Walt’s blue was 99% pure while his was 96%. He further told Gus “I know that 3% doesn’t sound like much but…IT IS!” I thought about that when Kyle was saying the LHC could only get 99.9999% speed of light.
@Lucas-yu4bu11 ай бұрын
Please, check your home's carbon monoxide detector
@WASTEPAW11 ай бұрын
@@Lucas-yu4buno no, he's on to something here
@ChucksSEADnDEAD11 ай бұрын
@@Lucas-yu4bu He's right. Going from 99% of C to 99.9% is hard, getting to 99.999% is even harder.
@CanadianArchaeologist9 ай бұрын
Hands down, the best particle accelerator story I've heard in a while.
@BonjourGuysBasement8 ай бұрын
Hands down
@APPALACHIAN_MOTH8 ай бұрын
@@BonjourGuysBasement😅
@brycerausch78408 ай бұрын
for sure 2 thumbs up! well…
@novadestry8 ай бұрын
Hands gone
@Lurch-Bot7 ай бұрын
So funny I forgot to laugh.
@ax75f922 ай бұрын
Great job putting this together for what made for a super entertaining and factual presentation! My one playful nitpick as a radiation therapist who uses linear accelerators daily to treat cancer... This man technically did not put his hand in a particle accelerator, but rather in the high energy X-rays that are created from the speeding electrons interacting with the tungsten target. The true sense of placing something in the path of a linear accelerator would be to be exposed to the electron “pencil” beam. We do use pure electrons in treating cancer as well - though there is a scattering foil placed in the beam to spread the electrons into a wide/uniform distribution. Electrons have a super low mass and as such they deposit their energy very superficially in tissue. We use this to our advantage in treating skin cancers and various other applications such as irradiating the bed of an excised tumor intra-operatively (in the operating room) using a portable linear accelerator electron beam. Just some random info for those fascinated by radiation. Again, great job man!
@flyingsodwai138211 ай бұрын
7:59 That is the coolest most badass sci-fi sentence I've ever heard and it's not even fi!
@whiteegretx11 ай бұрын
We gotta steal it and put it in our books
@Frank-os6gq11 ай бұрын
Not even what? What does fi! Mean?
@Nettahasleftthebuilding11 ай бұрын
@@Frank-os6gqfi stands for fiction so sci-fi is scientific fiction
@ethenoly11 ай бұрын
I started watching half-life histories a while ago when I was working in a factory. I quit my job and got into a radiation therapy program. Currently I work as a radiation therapist and am halfway through medical dosimetry school. I can't express how much of an impact this channel and your videos have had on me. Great video as always, keep it up!
@jarvis555210 ай бұрын
Congratulations, wow! I wish you well in your studies and possible new career :)
@ghostynugget97798 ай бұрын
I wish you the best of luck
@moonshinershonor2028 ай бұрын
Youse doing Jesus's work. Chin up b.
@brockoala299411 ай бұрын
Holy cow it's where I live! Though I never knew we had a particle accelerator, let alone such accident!
@Salt-ier11 ай бұрын
You did, when the Cold War made Vietnam important.
@EeeEee-bm5gx11 ай бұрын
What beats me, is that nobody translated the papers from Russian. There were many Vietnamese scientists and other workers in Soviet Union; Vietnam sided with USSR to ward off China. Many must have known Russian at high proficiency. I also find it hard to believe that at least some of the Vietnamese scientists hadn't studied in USSR
@danamullins272311 ай бұрын
@@EeeEee-bm5gx I think it was less that they couldn't translate or read it, and more that they were in a hurry and being complacent.
@josephkimani208911 ай бұрын
@@Salt-ier😂😂😊
@El-Djazir-Blobfish10 ай бұрын
@@Salt-ieractual vietnamese pepole in hanoi didnt know what are particle accelerators because they didnt get taught of it alot
@loganjohnson80102 ай бұрын
I love the Infinite Energy section, really fun and engaging background! Made the most of it!
@waywardgun11 ай бұрын
That moment of realization must have been truly horrifying, that from a brief 2 minute incident you know your hands are going to slowly die.
@FutureDeep11 ай бұрын
Nah, it's just arthritis.
@comyuse910311 ай бұрын
apparently not if it took him a damn week to work out that maybe radiation could be bad for his hands
@waywardgun11 ай бұрын
Yeah true, I chalk it down to a "this is fine" moment. You know its not, but it's more comforting to pretend otherwise.
@pauldavis210811 ай бұрын
You can go stand in a particle beam at CERN. The north area fixed target beam lines produce pions from the SPS protons. They "turn off the beam" by putting a 2m long concrete block in way making the area safe to access. What the block actually does though is convert the pions into a muon beam. While standing in the beam you feel nothing but it is odd to mentally realize that something is passing through you with the only indication being the flashing lights on your detector electronics. It makes you feel very transparent, like the world isn't really real.
@lynx408211 ай бұрын
Please stop putting that many spaces after sentences it's an eyesore
@AmbassadorBreadloaf11 ай бұрын
cope and seethe @@lynx4082
@TheHesseJames11 ай бұрын
@@lynx4082I hope you can cope and not suffer long term damage.
@alicethemad161311 ай бұрын
@TheHesseJames didn’t you hear him, you monster? His eyes are sore. That’s irreparable damage for sure.
@SanchoPanza-m8m11 ай бұрын
@@lynx4082 Triple spaces after a full stop _are_ highly unusual. His comment is informative though, with good spelling, grammar, capitalization and punctuation. I don't think it's worth criticizing, particularly when your own comment contains nothing of value and no punctuation to boot.
@HuyNguyen-ll9gz11 ай бұрын
As a Vietnamese person, I did not know this happened in Hanoi
@nguyenminhhieu796211 ай бұрын
Tôi lên mạng xem thông tin r thầy thường che tay phải hoặc đeo găng
@tosyl_chloride11 ай бұрын
Xem vid này tôi mới biết đến GS Trần Đức Thiệp (13:20). Chắc phải là người trong ngành vật lý hạt nhân mới nắm bắt được
@kivuntuntija11 ай бұрын
I'm from vietnam and I didn't even know we have a particle accelerator
@kyledodson299211 ай бұрын
May i ask as an American, why do the Vietnam people write English so well? Every Vietnamese comment under this video has spot on English! Very impressive.
@tosyl_chloride11 ай бұрын
@@kyledodson2992 While it's true that the younger generations of Vietnameses have familiarized themselves with English to a great degree, in the specific case of this comment section it's more about sampling bias than anything else. People without a sufficient degree of English proficiency wouldn't go out of their way to watch an English video about nuclear physics after all, and having a video about Vietnam would surely draw out the English-capable Vietnameses within the population of viewers.
@LendriMujinaАй бұрын
Considering the machine came with *no readable instructions,* it's a miracle that something even worse than this didn't happen.
@feather_lilly11 ай бұрын
I'm so happy you continued this series, it's by far my favourite of atomic documentaries. You don't waste time with exaggerating details for entertainment, because you understand the story and science behind it are exciting and immersive enough. Wonderful work, Kyle.
@Kinann11 ай бұрын
I was lucky enough to tour Fermilab (4 mile circle) in Batavia, Illinois and the beam just happened to be off when we were there. The tour lead showed us about 5 or 6 newer looking concrete blocks on the exterior wall and explained that the magnets had gotten out of sync and the particle burst out of the ring right through the containment tubes and surrounding magnets and ripped a hole out the original blocks from the wall. Blew me away there was so much power in a particle soooo small. C is really HUGE.
@DozyBinsh11 ай бұрын
My internal monologue the entire time I'm watching HLH: "aaaaaaaaaaah! "AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAH!!"
@dimitrilepain382111 ай бұрын
Every goddamn time i'm sitting in my chair, screaming at my desktop for how simple most of these incidents seem to be preventable from a today's point of knowledge. Yet dismissing your hand feeling 'weird' for your arthritis instead of THE RADIATION BEAM YOU GOT THIS MORNING is infuriatingly ignorant. Ngl, i find it hard to sympathise. Not that i'm not sympathising, but this guy makes it real hard for me is all i'm saying.
@ninadgadre393411 ай бұрын
@@dimitrilepain3821bro was subscribed to WishfulThinkingProMax
@hx552511 ай бұрын
@@dimitrilepain3821Not necessarily ignorance. The guy was just coping and hoping what he felt was a psychological problem or anxiety rather than admit the worst. And for some reason, Asians hate going to the doctors. For an Asian at that time, things would have to be seriously wrong to go for a doctor visit.
@dimitrilepain382111 ай бұрын
@@hx5525 "The guy was [...] hoping that what he felt was a psychological problem [...] rather than admit the worst." That is literally ignorance. He knew fully well what the consequences of his actions could and very likely would be, yet he dismissed that possibility, because it made him feel better in the moment. That. Is. Ignorance.
@cabbytabby7 ай бұрын
How the hell does Vietnam have the budget for a particular accelerator and Canada doesn’t?
@bmphil34003 ай бұрын
When you disregard all safety standards it makes things cheaper to build.....
@morningminh10 ай бұрын
I live in Vietnam, so from what i called, the things with regulations and policies for safety didnt apply much for our people back in the days. Especially back when Vietnam was just gotten out of a huge major war and Economy still try to recover itself. Everything we did was trying our best to getting back on track to live and having a better life, knowing that it would cost us life and many things else. And for us people, we usually joking about our braveness is on the top list since we were use to cutting bomb to sell scrap and gunpowder also. So yeah, long story short, it such an honor living in a country like that but also sometimes scary af 😅
@QihaniawithKnife19378 ай бұрын
I'm Vietnamese too! I always joke with my friends about the war knowing we were literal cave diggers
@Lurch-Bot7 ай бұрын
I wouldn't call the early '90s 'just getting out of a war'. Your war had been over for almost 2 decades when this happened. The fact is that there is a lax attitude towards safety in your country that is evident still today. All I gotta do is watch a Vietnamese motorcycling video to see that. Enjoy. Ignorance is bliss. The fact is that a communist government will never value human life as much as a capitalist one. You took your cues from the Soviet Union and China. A quick study of history will tell you they thought nothing of murdering people en masse to hold power. Even to this day, Russia is still sending human waves against superior troops. That might work when your back is against the wall but they didn't have to invade Ukraine. Putin is just trying to put the Soviet Union back together and his methods speak volumes to that. He would never fire his nukes at anyone simply because his own people would have him hung, drawn and quartered, assuming anyone was left after the retaliatory strike. And, unlike the old Soviet garbage they're using, our nukes would actually mostly work, instead of mostly being duds. Part of the reason their crap is so unreliable is because a lot of those Soviet subjects engaged in sabotage. And it was cheaply designed in the first place. They definitely didn't expect designs from the '50s to be fighting a war 70 years later. I will say that it was not America's place to get involved in your civil war. I will also say that the wrong side won and I think the outcome would have been different if there were never any US troops sent to Vietnam. We handed the communists the win just by getting involved. We are still facing the consequences of meddling in China's civil war today, however I am sure a lot of people in Taiwan are glad we did. But we sealed our own fate by not continuing on to Siberia when we got to Berlin in WWII. The simple fact is that the Soviet Union never should have lasted long enough to have a Cold War, or to corrupt Vietnam with their inhumane ways. You just traded one inhumane dictator (the French) for another. Imperialism comes in many forms and it is most insidious when perpetrated against one's own people. After all, we never tortured any of your people but you did not extend the same courtesy. It is dishonorable. Chances are you have zero idea what really happened at the Hanoi Hilton. You are still subject to anti-American propaganda, even as you pretend to extend diplomatic and trade courtesies. And when I say torture, I don't mean a rap on the head or bright lights, or even waterboarding. I mean torture solely for the purpose of making people suffer as much as possible. Killing them slowly. That's your legacy, next to which carpet bombing empty jungles or even Agent Orange dispersal pales in comparison. We were fighting a difficult war against an insidious enemy. But your side took it out on people who couldn't even run, often because they had been hobbled (deliberately shattering someone's ankles so they can never run again), but mostly because they were captive. Only the lowest excuse for humanity would do such things. What the US did to Vietnam pales in comparison to what numerous communist regimes have done to their own people. And the Soviets put more people in concentration camps than the Nazis could ever imagine. They treated the Jews as badly; millions died in numerous pogroms. While Germany and Japan are tales of redemption, Russia is just still holding on to the old ways. They never got what they truly deserved but if they keep fighting with Ukraine, they definitely will. The EU is moving to admit them as a means to stop the war. If Putin persists, beyond a certain point, he will be facing WWIII but this time Russia won't be on the winning side. China is a paper tiger. Doesn't matter about numbers these days. 200 awesome stealth fighters are better than 2000 crappy ones. When you start to impress civilian ferries into military service because you didn't plan for the thing you've been threatening for 70 years, it isn't a threat, it is just sad and pathetic. Like Kim Jong Un and his big missile. Just compensating for an inferiority complex, a common thread among Communist dictators. What I really don't get is how people could think a government in which they have no say is a good thing. And Vietnam has yet to learn the meaning of freedom. Do yourself a favor and don't make excuses for the fact your Communist government is lax on safety when you have no leg to stand on; don't even really know history. Especially not on KZbin.
@morningminh7 ай бұрын
@@Lurch-Bot tldr btw 😳 and when it comes to safety guidelines nowadays, much more better than before. And tbh, Vietnam just got out of the Trade Embargo by the fking Murica in the late 90s, before that, war in our country actually ended in the 80s again the Chinese and Cambodian. Just saying, if you really are that good and well understanding then come to our “communist country” and live rather than just trash talking 🫣
@binaryghosts513111 ай бұрын
Also going over the lack of concern and procedure this sounds like a case of the people involved not knowing what they are doing and not knowing the implications of what they are doing and just simply doing as they are told on the job. This is what a competency crisis is.
@kikivoorburg11 ай бұрын
Small point: at 2:41 you have 'E = mc^2 + pc' on the screen, but 'E^2 = m^2 c^4 + p^2 c^2' doesn't simplify to that! The real simplification is setting 'p = 0' (which is basically true for non-relativistic speeds) and then E^2 = m^2 c^4 does simplify to E = mc^2
@Astraeus..11 ай бұрын
A correction that changes nothing at the end result is completely irrelevant within the context of this kind of video.
@itsjustme884611 ай бұрын
You just made me feel dumb.
@amongsussyballs11 ай бұрын
@@Astraeus.. ok and?
@doryantemmerman904911 ай бұрын
@@Astraeus.. I'm with @kikivoorburg on this one... the fact that it changes nothing to the rest of the video is itself completely irrelevant: the simplifaction is simply incorrect. Many people watch these videos, and those types of mistakes are remarkable common (I've seen these mistakes on many university-level math exams), despite it being the result of a very basic algebraic formula that everyone has heard of, namely that (a + b)² = a² + 2ab + b², and not just a² + b². So, I think it is at least necessary to mention this mistake in the comments... to be honest, I absolutely cringed when I saw that simplification made, especially on a Kyle Hill video, where he seems to be very cautious and thorough with the scientific explanation of everything going on.
11 ай бұрын
I would add that the famous E = mc^2 is more correctly written as E_0 = mc^2 (where E_0 means energy at rest). To go from E^2 = m^2 c^4 + p^2 c^2 to E = m c^2 for p = 0, you would write it as E^2 = m^2 c^4 (1 + p^2 / (m^2 c^2)) and then expand sqrt(1 + x^2) for small values of x as sqrt(1 + x^2) ~= 1 + 1/2 x^2 + ... - which would lead to the classical equation E_k = 1/2 m v^2 for kinetic energy.
@dashalinna54273 ай бұрын
Bro got his hands ghoulified
@wa565711 ай бұрын
it never ceases to amaze me how scary radiation is.... exactly because of it's stealthiness and how people get used to it and forget to be cautious around this beast (no shade, i know i would get careless, it's sadly natural when something becomes routine)
@bobtheskutterbot11 ай бұрын
This is superb. I am a radiation worker and have worked with radiation safety systems. This video would be much better training for the workers than what we get! No one knows the work that goes into protection- the shielding calculations and verification, the interlocks and the procedures.
@AnthonyvanHamond11 ай бұрын
I really liked this style video. serious and extremely informative but not overacted and overanimated like some of the other video's. This video almost felt like it was intented for a different audience. Keep em comming Thank you!
@dogdie1472 ай бұрын
the way you pronounce vietnam make the native in me happy. Awesome video as all ways Mr. Hill
@TheSkubna11 ай бұрын
Most surprising there was no indicator in the room saying the experiment was live.
@evanpie71111 ай бұрын
The intro is so cool!
@kylehill11 ай бұрын
It's good right!?
@captainspaulding596311 ай бұрын
Wholeheartedly agree!
@Kemecgabriel11 ай бұрын
It is really good! Was it Thorsten Denk who made it or MR. Mass who made it? @@kylehill
@kylehill11 ай бұрын
This was actually one of my Kevins @@Kemecgabriel
@retro_jojo315911 ай бұрын
Its a good intro for sure, but the old intro had a more fitting vibe. Sorry to be "that guy"
@coreyduma32511 ай бұрын
Hey Kyle! As a (advanced) layperson I really enjoy the way you seem to accurately represent these various nuclear incidents. It's also very cool how you make it clear when you know exactly what you are talking about or otherwise Here's some interesting incidents I found that I am not aware of any of your videos addressing: Tokaimura nuclear accident 1999 Kyshtym disaster 1957 Windscale Piles fire 1957 SL-1 nuclear meltdown 1961 (Army) SL-2 reactor accident 1961 (AEC) The first one sounds most interesting The SL 1 and 2 incidents could be exceptionally suitable for a KZbin format. It gets the curiosity going and I have so many obvious questions Thanks dude, for everything. All of the science presenters I grew up with really seem to like you and are eager for you to continue their legacy
@LESTR9711 ай бұрын
Actually, he's already covered SL-1. Plainly Difficult did a great video on Windscale, but I would love to see Kyle's take on that story.
@sglazekkg687511 ай бұрын
Was SL-1 the bizarre Idaho Falls potential love triangle/murder/suicide in the 3-person reactor?
@DannySettle-yi2ef2 ай бұрын
Respect and Love ❤️ Thank's for the information 👏 🙌 ❤
@grahamcann176111 ай бұрын
Once upon a time, many years ago, I got to go along on a private tour of the Stanford Linear Accelerator, given by one of the top Physicists to a Physicist who was working on an Accelerator in Australia (who happened to be my father's cousin's husband). At one point they got talking technical, using many words that I couldn't begin to fathom, and then remembered that I was standing there with them, and they apologized to me. And I honestly told them no apology was needed. I didn't understand what they were saying, but I could hear and see their passion and excitement, and it was awesome! I mention that story to say this: You are a science communicator helping us mere-mortals understand and appreciate the magic of science, but; perhaps one day you could give us an undiluted video of something where you talk-tech were you allow us to be confused by the tech-talk. I know it's still a cherished moment for me, even though I don't remember any of it. (I think maybe they talked quarks and then got smaller, maybe.) As always, thank you so very much for the videos.
@hoangsoncameralabvn11 ай бұрын
I'm Vietnamese, born and living in Hanoi. But this is literally the first time I heard there is a particle accelarator in my country, let alone this story. Truly each day is a chance to learn something new.
@alistairmaciver472111 ай бұрын
Didn't fucking ask bro.
@hoangsoncameralabvn11 ай бұрын
@@alistairmaciver4721 then why bother? I didn't even respond to you
@goodpotatoto11 ай бұрын
insane considering how old and worn down the atomic institute building is, let alone the fact that such building even store a fucking particle accerelator.
@zakosist11 ай бұрын
Maybe your country were hiding the truth
@bachlehuy220811 ай бұрын
same i searched for the professor name and nothing show up, only a few newspaper about him and his researches
@mistingwolf11 ай бұрын
"... Assuming that if you can't feel something, nothing is happening." Shivers!
@FutureDeep11 ай бұрын
Exactly what I told my girlfriend.
@youllrebel2anything-3 ай бұрын
you make me interested in things I will never be interested in outside of your videos
@sifridbassoon11 ай бұрын
I am continually impressed at how you can discuss serious, tragic events with such intelligence and sensitivity.
@vihungchu11 ай бұрын
The fact that he’s still alive and well with many awards for his researches amazed me. Making the survival rate of this incident is still 100%.
@tosyl_chloride11 ай бұрын
'tis just a flesh wound, literally. He's a well-respected professor, no doubt.
@kanii_11 ай бұрын
It's honestly great that you point out that this incident occurred primarily due to human error, not because of the nature of radiation itself. It would be great if more people were aware of these details in regards to these types of incidents.
@kyleclifton59347 ай бұрын
Greatly appreciate the Half-Life Histories series. Would love to see something regarding Mayak and its long history.
@miketacos903411 ай бұрын
I just can’t imagine how stressful it must have been to think “Maybe I can save my left hand” one day to then seeing the necrosis come back… it’d been toying with your emotions 😢
@donle955311 ай бұрын
My dad worked there and that case was famous. His motorbike later transformed to be used with his left hand. My dad was the one who brought by him self the box containing radioactive material from that institute to another one in Dalat by train. There is another case when a scientist fell on stares while bringing a big acid tank with another in the Chemical Institute.
@pennywang64614 ай бұрын
Please tell us more :o
@sammyi250511 ай бұрын
This just reinforces to me that if I (somehow) ever get an irritated limb, I'd want it amputated quickly. I'm not dealing with long term molecular damage, thank you.
@alexturnbackthearmy190711 ай бұрын
You will be very lucky with limb. Most of these injuries are on body, and there isnt much you can do.
@gi70st11 ай бұрын
@@alexturnbackthearmy1907 full body amputation
@imclueless98753 ай бұрын
THANK YOU. Literally had this question pop into my head today so glad i found this!!
@dantaehiruma591811 ай бұрын
The Director's name can be seen written next to the photos of his hands: Tran Duc Thiep. From what I can find, he's still alive and still works in the field.
@MagisterialVoyager10 ай бұрын
He wrote tons of research! I’m just wondering whether he got operated on and now has some sort of functioning hands.
@condor227910 ай бұрын
@@MagisterialVoyager He still has the thumb, forefinger and middle finger on his left hand.
@MagisterialVoyager10 ай бұрын
@@condor2279 Oh I see! Yes, I recently did a video call for work with an overseas gentleman as well and I realised he only has half of his left hand's index finger. A decorated museum curator at 75. A wonderful person.
@JonTheGeek11 ай бұрын
I'm one and a half minutes into a Kyle Hill video and already understand how a Proton Pack works. I love it here.
@HigherMammal11 ай бұрын
As always, I appreciate your non-sensationalized and respectful approach to science education, especially where real people are/were involved.
@KavyaSundarapandian-e2r2 ай бұрын
I will never understand the science behind any of this but the way you describe it is incredible and gives me the slightest glimpse into what everything means!
@bennyrashasha992011 ай бұрын
Sooooo you don't get super powers?
@shawners151411 ай бұрын
Hey Kyle! I live in the Tri-Cities, about 40 miles from the Hanford site. You should really do a video on it. My sister in-law works there and she’s actually part of the project where they’re turning the nuclear waste into glass. Love your videos!
@NaudVanDalen11 ай бұрын
11:37 It's ironic how uranium is the best defense against radioactivity, but can also produce it if it's the correct isotope.
@matthewboire68436 ай бұрын
I thought all isotopes of it were radioactive?
@TheMulberryShark4 ай бұрын
@matthewboire6843 The are, but in the case of urainium, U-238 is far less radioactive than U-235