Here's a wholesome anecdote: An 80+ yo aunt of mine had to go through subcraneal surgery for removing a brain tumor. The doctors explained how the procedure was and that they would have to put bolts and (I believe) a metal plaque to secure the skull after removing the mass. Some weeks after, when we asked her how she was and if felt anything for having metal in the head she laughed and told us "Nah, doctors were just joking, that's impossible"; we were shocked and she proceeded to grab a magnet from the fridge, pass it around her head and explain us "If I had metal in the head, the magnet would stick." We smiled and noone tried to explain her that titanium is barely magnetic, because she was very aprehensive about having, literally, her head open.
@CaptainMarvelsSon7 ай бұрын
I have a piece of medical hardware in my body that controls the flow of a specific type of circulated fluid (I'm being vague to keep from getting too technical). The valve that controls the amount of flow is very loosely magnetic and my doctor can take a specific strength magnet and adjust how open or closed the valve is just by touching it to my skin. This eliminates the need for additional surgeries. It's quite ingenious, actually.
@WrenStanchen7 ай бұрын
Whoa, that's amazing!!!
@Gocunt7 ай бұрын
what if you're near a large magnet?
@CaptainMarvelsSon7 ай бұрын
@@Gocunt I'm sure the magnet would screw with it. I've never tried placing a neodymium magnet on the spot (that would be stupid to test), but I have it in my medical records that I can't get an MRI scan of any part of my body.
@osiris11027 ай бұрын
That sounds dangerous, what if someone prank opened your valve from outside?
@CaptainMarvelsSon7 ай бұрын
@@osiris1102 A "prank"? I can't imagine anyone that I have ever known trying that just for the fun of it, and it's not like I have an arrow pointing at it "Press magnet here." 😆 I have had it for a dozen years without any problems, it takes more than just a refrigerator magnet to affect it, and I would just go back to my doctor to adjust it again. Closing the valve isn't death.
@danwalsh71167 ай бұрын
The main reason for administering cow magnets to cows was the due use of bailing wire which has now been replaced by plastic bailing twine and why this practice has been almost forgotten. The magnet would hold the small bits of bailing wire in the cows "first stomach" the Rumen and save the animal from damage that result from the wire traveling further through the digestive process.
@ragapple1mark8957 ай бұрын
The practice of.giving.cows magnets is not completely dead litter being major problem - problem is much of it is aluminum, plastic, or glass which magnet doesn't collect
@CWorgen57327 ай бұрын
We still use it in our cows because there are always loose bits and pieces on the farm.
@rolfs21657 ай бұрын
Makes me wonder how much plastic the average cow eats …
@colemanmoore98717 ай бұрын
@rolfs2165 They eat every bit of plastic that is in front of them. I had a hunting lease where the land owner also ran cattle. Anything plastic was chewed on by the cows. Wires, buckets, chairs, ropes, bags, tarps. Anything. They seemed to search it out.
@TheOfficialABHS7 ай бұрын
The rumen is the last stomach. The Reticulum or honeycomb is the first. It is to filter food as it enters the digestive system. That is why the magnet (and iron) stay there and not pooped out. Metal would also be filtered out, but it would float around in the reticulum and possibly cut the walls. The magnet holds the metal pieces and reduces the chance of movement and cutting. It is also not just pastured cattle. I've seen large magnets on feed processing equipment (like grinders and mixers).
@RingingBellee7 ай бұрын
12:07 ooooo, I’ve undergone Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS). It was incredibly helpful in reducing my treatment resistant depression! the magnetic field is about the strength of an mri. It’s a little spooky when you’re doing it, because they can make your arm/hand/fingers move by pulsing something into your brain. If I remember correctly as well, the mechanism that makes TMS work as a treatment for mental illnesses is rather poorly understood. Super cool 💕
@Misstborn7 ай бұрын
I was recently offered TMS! I'm not on it yet, but may start in a few months if I need to. Very very interesting treatment
@RingingBellee7 ай бұрын
@@Misstborn I hope if you end up doing it, that it works for you ❤️. It was life changing for me. I’m also sorry that you’re in a position where it’s being considered. The fight is often long, but worthwhile.
@fliptrip3607 ай бұрын
Yellow food coloring causes depression that would create resistant depression doesn't matter what you take or do when you keep exposing yourself to what's causing it before you poison yourself with pills like a good little sheep does for the government and big pharma cut out food coloring first and it can take weeks for the food coloring to get out of your system and be careful it's in everything because the intent is to poison the American people
@jerseygirlinatl77017 ай бұрын
I've had it for both my depression and anxiety. The do have to switch sides for it to work on the separate issues. I still have to see a therapist and take meds, but I finally saw progress.
@3800S17 ай бұрын
I have wondered if TMS could help those suffering long term/permanent antidepressant withdrawal syndrome? Since people like myself where the very meds that where suppose to help have left us disabled and we can't take any drug what so ever to help with the symptoms because it makes the condition much worse.
@SlyPearTree7 ай бұрын
Back in the 80's I did some tests with floppies to check how "fragile" they were, one was sticking one on the fridge with a fridge magnet. I do not remember how long I left it there but I do remember it did not lose its data. Those were one sided 160K floppies, it's possible that this low density helped their reliability.
@Wanhope27 ай бұрын
Guess we could compare the field energy of a fridge magnet vs the floppy drives writing and reading hardware
@3800S17 ай бұрын
I've tried this on some regular 1.44meg floppies and it corrupted a good amount of them, the key was iirc was the move a strong magnet over the surface back and forth like you would to magnetise a screw driver. Also cassette tapes wiped instantly when you wound the tap with a magnet in place of where the head goes, same as VHS. But even bringing the magnet over the cassette housing on the side was enough to lose the volume in most cases but not wipe the content completely.
@EgonSorensen7 ай бұрын
Floppy discs works a bit like magnetic viewing film - changing fields change the pattern. Sticking a floppy onto a fridge and leaving it there won't change the fields a whole lot, so the pattern just remain the same. If you had moved the magnet around in circles, zig-zagging, etc - the data would have been literally wiped away
@dawsie7 ай бұрын
I was really, really good at zapping floppies and data tapes due to my body holding Alegre amounts of electric static once it reached a set number I could zap things. The company I use to work for had to get experts in to test the building we were in because when we moved into it I started zapping the magnetic keys that opened all the security doors. I had to make the programmers place their data disc or tapes on the desk, I refused to take them out of their hands because 1, each time I zapped anything it left burn marks on the tips if my fingers and it hurts like hell, 2, if the static charge was big enough it either scrambled the data or wiped it clean as if there was nothing on it to start with. The guys got me to walk up and down the hall ways and other places within the new building and they were shocked that I had not self combusted going by the data they were getting off me. I had to wear a special anklet which kept my skin connected to the ground 24/7 while in the office. Every security door had to have a zapping plate on the wall that I had to touch first before inserting the magnetic key card. My watch is meant to be charged every 7 days 😹😹😹I put it on to charge on average every 4-5 weeks. All my clothes had to be sprayed with a special solution after each time they were washed so that it stopped them from contributing to my electrifying personality 😹😹😹 One day when my boss had a new guy start working for us never believed the guys when they told him about me, well we were all called into a meeting with the boss and the new guy would not place the company cars keys on the table because he had been told I must take them to to ensure that I had received them 🙄🙄 so as I reached for the dam keys there was a blue/which static discharge that happened between us, I think it was the dam sound that I heard that freaked me the most, as I grabbed the darn keys he was dangling from his hand, the next thing I knew I was flying across the dam room slamming into the office window (thank goodness it was over and inch thick) when I came too the idiots face was white as a ghost, turned out he lied because he did not believe everyone about my issue with static build up, the hand that I had grabbed the metal keys with, you could see the an imprint burnt into palm of my hand. I had not had the chance to put the dam anklet on when I got into the office. The guy never came near me again the whole time I was working there after that day. He even went as far as moving his things from the desk next to me to a different work station. Even after all those years I still have issues with brand new buildings, for some reason they seem to boast my static issues every time. I can feel the electricity running through the wiring when it is powering up lamps, computers and anything electrical. I can run my finger along the edge of my iPad while it is plugged into the mains and feel the ripple of the electric field all around the iPad the minute I pull the plug it vanishes. It’s the same with those flat screen TV’s I can feel the rippling of the electric field while it’s turned on. Once the power is off the rippling affect is gone. Having an MRI is a pain because it feels like I have become a lightning rod my hair has to be tied into a ponytail as it starts to fan out, I can feel every single strand of hair on my body standing up as I go through the machine. The same thing happens when I walk through the metal detecting machine.
@joshyoung144020 күн бұрын
That's not "fragility." Using that word definitely made me not understand the story at first lol
@SciMinute7 ай бұрын
I really enjoyed this Q&A format!
@mh62767 ай бұрын
I think they should make a series out of it.
@mgnt2327 ай бұрын
Loved this longer rapid fire question/answer format. Should do these more often :)
@hohnzy7 ай бұрын
if you don't get your magnets from the Magnesia region of Greece, they're just sparkling metals
@wiggletonthewise21416 ай бұрын
Ah I see, the classic champagne dilemma
@lungcancer696 ай бұрын
Underrated comment
@marieugorek59177 ай бұрын
Best friend just completed a course of TMS. Definitely worth it for them. They are now able to feel like continuing to live is worth it for the first time in their memory.
@jhakama7 ай бұрын
I've wanted to try TMS for a while now. The main problem is that I would have to have transportation, five days per week, for six-seven weeks. There's no way with my current mental state that I would be able to make it to 30 or more appointments, even if I had the transportation. Hopefully, the Stanford SAINT version will be available in my area soon.
@LinthusOriginal7 ай бұрын
I know it's not breaking news at this point. But I would like to say, that those new backgrounds are amazing.
@CWorgen57327 ай бұрын
Oh man, I was gonna say they're really interesting but I strongly dislike 😅
@LinthusOriginal7 ай бұрын
@@CWorgen5732 this one in specific is not good I think. But it is more interesting when they do a video in a real background not just an obviously green screen.
@mh62767 ай бұрын
I liked it.
@Omnifarious07 ай бұрын
7:06 - Neutron stars are also often thought to have very intense magnetic fields that dwarf those of even are strongest magnets. 9:18 - This one is historical. Magnets _used_ to be really bad for computers because one important storage media was floppy disks. Floppy disks use plastic coated with magnetized iron dust to store stuff. So a magnet near a floppy disk would have the tendency to scramble the information. This is not a problem with USB sticks. And hard-drives (which do use magnetized iron dust as well) have a big metal shell around them that tends to block out external magnetic fields. So magnets are not nearly so bad for computers as they used to be. Oh... one other thing, magnets used to play havoc with CRT screens because those screens use magnetic fields to direct the electron beams. Again, we don't really use CRT screens anymore.
@Flytrap7 ай бұрын
Long ago, when I worked tech support and most monitors were CRT, this guy called and said, "I have a big purple streak across the top of my monitor." I asked, "What's on top of your monitor?" He replied, "A subwoofer." I said, "Well, why don't we take that off?" One of the easiest calls I ever had,
@AnonymousAnarchist27 ай бұрын
... Hard drives where still the number one concern. We just do not use hard dives much if at all anymore and hard drives have came a long way. Floppy disks where just portable hard drive platters. Computers also *used* to use magentic storage for ram. And some CPU's still do use magnets for thier internal cache, nothing is faster to read then the direction of magnitation its litteraly the speed of single propagation in a wire. Its also a lot physically bigger and slower to write to.
@caspenbee7 ай бұрын
Back in the day My Little Ponies had a weak magnet in one hoof (not sure why). I used to run mine over the tv screen watching them change the colors. Simpler times!
@NapsterBaaaad7 ай бұрын
Insane Clown Posse are going to LOOOOOOVE this video...
@thecodemachine7 ай бұрын
I don't wanna ask a scientist.
@justincraig3987 ай бұрын
I only clicked this video to see how far I had to scroll to find an ICP reference. I didn’t even start the video before I saw this.
@justagame1017 ай бұрын
@@thecodemachine Y'all motherf*ckers lyin', and gettin' me pissed
@MichaelOKC7 ай бұрын
@justincraig398 So, I'm an ICP fan, but I can't call myself a Juggalo! Lol... so please explain!? I searched, but obviously, I had an axe in my brain or something! 😅
@NC-oy8hq7 ай бұрын
@@MichaelOKCsame
@MikeLau-d8l7 ай бұрын
Oh my god! My big brother had a cow magnet we used to play with as a kid. I was told what it was for but always kinda thought it was my brother trying to BS me. Thanks for the memory Sci Show
@francescocarillo977 ай бұрын
This videos where you answer the most common searched questions on google should become a stable thing in the channel. Keep up the good work!
@joshuafalck_7 ай бұрын
A note on the computer part. Most computer I made in the last 5 years are not using magnetic storage and will not be affected by magnetic. Also old tube tv/monitors use a CRT (cathode ray tub) and magnetic fields can cause issues with these devices. Otherwise magnetics are safe for use around computer and you don't have to worry about them.
@NotExpatJoe6 ай бұрын
Introducing a strong magnet can create small voltages, which may travel over electronic circuits and cause damage. To damage an SSD, you would need a tremendous change in magnetic flux - and I have proven this by putting a SSD in an MRI machine. So, under most normal circumstances you are right but, there is always some crazy person like me to mess things up.
@4RILDIGITAL7 ай бұрын
Appreciate this extensive explanation about magnets! Always fascinating to learn about the science behind such ubiquitous objects.
@ixiairisborne16954 ай бұрын
My favorite magnet use: Cheap rice cookers. There's a magnet in the rice cooker that is chemically calibrated so that, once it (and thus the pot of food) gets above the boiling point of water, meaning there's almost no water left in the pot, it loses just enough magnetism that the spring it's resisting can overpower it, switching the circuit from "cook" to "warm." When it then cools, it regains its full magnetism. It's such an elegantly simple mechanism and I adore it.
@gamesandpctipstricks88557 ай бұрын
I work on a knacker wagon collecting dead stock from farms. Had a cow once that had swallowed a peice of wire that gotten into its feed and ate it. That magnet caught the peice of wire but it was to big and peirced its stomach and straight into its heart. The magnet had loads of other bits of debree from washers to small screws. The wire that killed it looked like it was from a tire tread like cord from a tire. What farmers over in the UK do they usually put old tires ontop of feed to keep it covered. Well old tired crack and degrade and that's how wire usually gets into their food
@KY_CPA7 ай бұрын
I really like these new sets and longer episodes ❣️
@susannewillert26857 ай бұрын
I did early research on magnetic fields and bone growth in HS! Cool to see it went further and was tried in patients.
@ag135i7 ай бұрын
There's a motor nearly in all home appliances be it fridge, mixer, blender washing machine, induction and also tools like cutting and grinding machines, motors be it temp or perm are very important part of modern day life.
@Gu1tarJohn7 ай бұрын
Fun little magnet anecdote - I once used a bulk tape eraser (STRONG handheld electromagnet) to wipe a hard drive before throwing it away.
@TheOfficialABHS7 ай бұрын
I had a shop teacher stack up a bunch of hard drives and connect them to an arc welding machine. One shot of high voltage, and they were wiped.
@dreyfusslugado7 ай бұрын
If you've ever seen those hexagonal-shaped grooves etched into the surface of the street at a traffic light, that's part of the system that signals the presence of a vehicle at the intersection. There a coil of wire embedded in the asphalt, with a small electrical current running through it, connected to the traffic light control box. When a vehicle moves over the loop, the metal in the vehicle interacts with the electrical current (you've basically created an electromagnet with your car) and the traffic control box detects this interaction (the electrical resistance increases when there's metal near the loop). This triggers the traffic light to start the cycle to change to green.
@pauldrice19967 ай бұрын
As somebody that's wiped a hard drive with a magnet it doesn't quite need MRI strength. You can definitely do it with neodymium especially if it's in a laptop.
@sypeiterra76137 ай бұрын
Did this once out of spite after someone threw my own hard drive
@heyjustj7 ай бұрын
Now all I know about magnets is this, give me a glass of water, let me drop it on the magnets, that's the end of the magnets.
@Ice_Karma7 ай бұрын
I like the rapid-fire format. ♥
@CDCI37 ай бұрын
I'd have been trying to sneak some "magnets, how do they work?" jokes in constantly, but even during the "How do magnets work?" section, the closest I could find was Stefan smiling right after the question was shown.
@demonflowerchild7 ай бұрын
What?
@CDCI37 ай бұрын
@@demonflowerchild nothing, I guess.
@丫o7 ай бұрын
I got the ICP reference :)
@diecastjunkie7 ай бұрын
I told my wife we were magnets because we were so attracted to each other. "Lame!" She said. She was wrought but we ironed it out.
@jakefisher-psalm237 ай бұрын
Dorky humor is the best humor.
@kbee2257 ай бұрын
The least believable part of that job is you having a wife. 💀
@k4rg0d00d137 ай бұрын
from what I've been taught I have to ask--does knitting affect magnetism more than crochet? I think crochet does more looping so it'll create stronger things and knitting will do more in terms of alignment so that's a possible question to pursue.
@CWorgen57327 ай бұрын
Magnetism of which thing?
@lesleyghostdragon31497 ай бұрын
Thanks to the whole SciShow team for all your great videos 👏🤓👏
@tool83377 ай бұрын
I really like this format and length!
@sth.7777 ай бұрын
For years, I've charged my screwdrivers and other tools by dragging them (always in the same direction) across a strong magnet a few times; this allows screwdrivers to hold on to screws, for instance...
@barbimachan91647 ай бұрын
Excellent video ! thanks for sharing !!
@BPBomber7 ай бұрын
Great show format.
@MaxPower-vg4vr7 ай бұрын
The Magnetic Monopole Paradox Contradictory: Classical Electromagnetism ∇ × B = μ0j (Magnetic fields have no sources/monopoles) ∇ ⋅ B = 0 (Magnetic flux is solenoidal) This appears paradoxical since individual magnetic charges are allowed by the laws of physics. Non-Contradictory Possibility: Monadic Charge Network Electrodynamics F = q(Ax - Γx,y Ay) (Force from difference in vector potentials) Γx,y = gx gy / rxy (Monadic charge relations) Treating magnetism as collective network phenomena arising from vectorial differences in monadic charge perspective phases Ax, Ay with relations Γx,y avoids paradoxes.
@andreask.26757 ай бұрын
Regarding the harddrives: There are actually very powerful (crush/squash/pinch your finger-type strong) neodynium magnets INSIDE mechanical harddrives. They together with a coil provide the movement of the read/write heads.
@klocugh127 ай бұрын
ICP's new favorite video.
@EyesOfByes7 ай бұрын
7:17 This is why induction stoves need to have better magnetcooling, and perhaps reuse that excess heat for other cooking or water heating
@jennifers74127 ай бұрын
The cow magnets was something I was introduced to as a small child while visiting my Grandparents dairy farm. Later I was trying to reach a dropped screw and thought to myself "I need one of those cow magnets" That was the first time I stopped and wondered if that explanation was something I dreamed or was an adult pulling my leg. I went to the internet to confirm that that was indeed a thing. It got me thinking about how before the internet, that would have to just be a thing you thought you heard and would have no way of confirming without consulting a farmer or a book on cow husbandry.
@0o0ification7 ай бұрын
There's still so much to discover in this field of inquiry! I simply try to keep in mind that electricity and magnetism are phenomena resulting from the same force of nature, and then try to keep up with all of the discoveries from there 😅
@jparker7857 ай бұрын
I was drawn to this episode for some reason... 😊
@maolcogi7 ай бұрын
Fun fact, magnets make the best (my opinion) electronic switches in the form of hall effect switches. They're great for stuff like gaming controllers/keyboards, and even security doors! They're accurate and reliable, they use permanent magnets, so less power needed, and they don't need things to make contact to act as a switch so they last longer.
@WingedAsarath7 ай бұрын
The linguistic etymology of the word magnet is something I never considered, but it's cool to find it's derived from an actual place name! Also interesting how little the word has actually changed through the millenia. From the online etymological dictionary: magnet (n.) "variety of magnetite characterized by its power of attracting iron and steel," mid-15c. (earlier magnes, late 14c.), from Old French magnete "magnetite, magnet, lodestone," and directly from Latin magnetum (nominative magnes) "lodestone," from Greek ho Magnes lithos "the Magnesian stone," from Magnesia (see magnesia), region in Thessaly where magnetized ore was obtained.
@duB420Grass7 ай бұрын
I understand it's hard to even start listing uses for magnets because just scratching the surface of the average person's everyday life interactions with magnets could take up multiple videos, but I felt that microphones and speakers were a huge missed opportunity to drive the point home here. All types modern microphones and speakers uses electromagnetism to convert sound pressure into electric pulses and vice versa. He was literally speaking into a magnet to record this so that we can use a magnet to recreate his voice later on.
@bnthern7 ай бұрын
great presentation !!
@shaider19827 ай бұрын
Technology Connections has a video on how the Curie point of a magnet is used by simple rice cookers to turn off once the rice is cooked without resorting to electroics like thermistors.
@jamesmnguyen7 ай бұрын
One of my favorite mysteries relating to magnets is about Magnetars: Last I checked, we don't know exactly how a stellar corpse made of neutral subatomic particles generates a magnetic field, let alone a strong one. There are some hypothesis though.
@fishstix42097 ай бұрын
1:36 ICP and their fans lean in intrigued 🤔...😂🤣😂
@TWhite947 ай бұрын
There ain’t any Juggalos watching science videos on KZbin 🤣
@fishstix42097 ай бұрын
@@TWhite94 it's funny because it's true 😂😂😂
@Trag-zj2yo7 ай бұрын
As a quality control technique, magnetic particle inspection is used to find surface defects in ferromagntic materials. An interesting topic.
@randykays59397 ай бұрын
When I was a kid I used cow magnets on my DIY holographic camera. I had a metal sheet attached to a piece of granite. My physics teacher let me use some of his optics stuff for holding the lenses and mirrors. But I needed to attach the mounts to the metal plate. Do I went to my local farm &fleet and bought cow magnets, just like in the video.
@sumdood70116 ай бұрын
Every time he said the word “magnets” I kept thinking of Charlie Kelly from its always sunny. “What’s your favorite hobby?” (Dennis) “Uh magnets” (Charlie) 😂
@Amocles7 ай бұрын
This is great can you do the same format and length for something about plasma
@aliengeo7 ай бұрын
I like this format!
@punditgi7 ай бұрын
Excellent video! 😊
@streakydanco7 ай бұрын
When we were taught these things in secondary school, it didn't really make sense. Now, I don't know if I understand it better because, I didn't have enough knowledge to put it into proper context then, or, you're just explaining it better than my secondary school teachers 😅 Great job anyways!!!
@kewakl88917 ай бұрын
Last week I was talking to a co-worker about magnets in cows. They though that I was joking.
@goncalovazpinto62617 ай бұрын
Question answered from 10:00 to 10:46
@WindyDelcarlo7 ай бұрын
The description of ferromagnetism reminded me that paramagnetism sounds _basically_ the same on the quantum level. And reminded me that I really don't know why they work differently.
@mastod0n17 ай бұрын
I like the new background that isn't a green screen. Maybe because Stefan matched his shirt perfectly.
@diananoss99317 ай бұрын
When i studied veterinary medicine back in 2000, we learned to feed the cows a magnet on a string with a protective rubber bell around it, so it could be taken out. So not all of them are left in the animal 👍🏻
@mattshu7 ай бұрын
My grandpa used to smack his screwdriver against something to make the screws stick easier. Can’t remember against what
@christianheichel7 ай бұрын
How do lava flows take hundreds of thousands of years to cool down from top to bottom? That has to happen for the multiple preserved lava flows that have the top of the flow magnetically attuned to an opposite magnetic north and then lower down in a different direction and then lower down still in a different direction. It seems more likely that the lava flow cooled over the course of years or decades, and during that time the magnetic pole flip-floped quite frequently
@fghsgh7 ай бұрын
12:33 surprised you didn't mention how electromagnetism can be completely derived just from coulomb's (or well, gauss's) law and special relativity (the initial reason to develop it was in fact to explain electromagnetism) of course this doesn't explain how electron spin works but it's something at least? moving charges cause magnets
@NemencioRas7 ай бұрын
I remember in the 1980ies there was a single event of the detection of a magnetic mono pole. Are they still searching for more magnetic mono pole events??
@TheGrumbleduke7 ай бұрын
Yes - MoEDAL at the LHC is looking for them (the "Mo" stands for "Monopole"). The discovery of magnetic monopoles would require us to rewrite a lot of our models around magnetism. MoEDAL has been looking since 2011, and despite being improved still hasn't found any magnetic monopoles. For now, as far as we know, magnetic fields always go in loops, so don't have true poles.
@sandbridgekid41217 ай бұрын
Rocketlab's Neutron will get most of the small and medium NRO, DARPA payloads. ULA the big stuff.
@MojoRevelation7 ай бұрын
Magnets get their name from the Greek territory Magnesia ad Sipylum where the lodestone was mined which in Turkey and is different from the Magnesia in modern Greece.
@existenceisillusion65287 ай бұрын
So why is it that in strictly 2 dimensions, there is no magnetic field, and in 4 or more dimensions, the magnetic field dominates? Also, it's called spin because the units work out to be the same as spin angular momentum. It doesn't really make sense as literal spin, because some particles have half integer spin, meaning you can think of the particle having to rotate twice to get back to the starting point.
@pauldrice19967 ай бұрын
I'd love to see a video about explosively pumped flux compression generators.
@ThatTimeTheThingHappened7 ай бұрын
Best part of magnets: look up the origin of the words for orient, east, north, south and west. Especially before magent people “oriented” by looking toward the rising sun (east) and north was just left of the rising sun. People before magents imagine looking east when orienting themselves. After magnets, people would point “left of the rising sun” and soon we would eventually imagine every direction relative to “north” The invention of the magnetic compass shifted our de facto direction from east to north.
@grabthatauto57 ай бұрын
13:55 is a bell clapper an object? I know bell clapper deformity is a thing...
@justinstrickland617 ай бұрын
Nick from the yard should get a credit on this video lmao
@MitchBurns7 ай бұрын
Humans also have the ability to sense a magnetic field. This tends to be stronger in men than women, and also is heavily tied to a person’s sense of direction. Exposure to a strong magnetic field will actually disrupt that and cause a person to feel disoriented while in the magnetic field, and for a moment thereafter, until they get their barring, quite literally. It’s no more harmful than putting a blindfold on though.
@qazhr7 ай бұрын
Sound a good show idea
@MikesTropicalTech7 ай бұрын
The question you forgot to ask: Will Sheldon ever find a magnetic monopole?
@fishstix42097 ай бұрын
9:40 "giggity" who else but quagmire
@silviavalentine38127 ай бұрын
12:51 pbs space time has a good video on this
@fishyerik7 ай бұрын
The placebo effect is real. Besides no real evidence for healing capabilities of magnets, there's also no known real reason to assume/suspect that they could have a healing effect. Other than that, and some "details" about electromagnets, not technically completely accurate, a great episode, really funny!
@revdrjon7 ай бұрын
Easy enough to run a doubleblind on: moar research required!
@fishyerik7 ай бұрын
@@revdrjon I think there is more than enough research done on the subject to conclude that if you're finding positive results, you're probably not doing real science. Besides being cheap and safe to do research on, it would also be cheap and risk free treatment, if it worked. As a safe placebo effect catalyst, it could be considered preferable over some other forms of alternative medicine, for things that the placebo effect can help, but placebo is temporary, and a distraction from actual solutions.
@vegastrypes7 ай бұрын
ICP needs to see this ep.
@milestench29227 ай бұрын
2:24 Had me dying!
@CozinhadoDemir6 ай бұрын
The Magnesia region of ancient Greece is in Turkey now, and the province is still called Mahnesia (Manisa, actually).
@_andrewvia7 ай бұрын
Hank and Savannah are very effective PROducers (leading from in front). Is there such a thing in the world as an ANTIducer? (a CONducer would be "with guidance") (they are conducive producers)
@paulacoyle56857 ай бұрын
Well, we all know that the way to destroy a magnet is to just put water on it 😂😂
@definingstyle1457 ай бұрын
😂😂
@paulburgess89097 ай бұрын
LMAO
@markofdistinction60947 ай бұрын
This video could attract more subscribers ;-)
@MitchBurns7 ай бұрын
Actually, even though the magnetic poles only switch every 300,000 years or so is true, we are actually getting close to one. I forget exactly how long it will be, but I’m fairly confident we have less than 1,000 years before the next one. The crazy thing is that compasses will get really weak for a good while before and after that happens.
@gamesturbator7 ай бұрын
You know if you get them wet, that's the end of the magnet! 😂
@Bananamello7 ай бұрын
The intro lmao 😂 my mind just spiraled
@CuriousChameleon7 ай бұрын
A quick youtube search of Richard Feynman - Fun to Imagine -- has a great part on Magnets -- and I highly recommend everyone to go directly to the source and hear from a Quantum Electrodynamics Physicist -- my man can explain it to you like you are 5.
@fireriffs7 ай бұрын
So here's an odd one. At some restaurants that use cheap flatware, that flatware is magnetic. You can take the end of your fork, for example, you can make it pull the knife. It's not incredibly strong but it works if you don't move it too fast. Is that flatware intentionally magnetized or did it somehow get magnetized after the fact and if so how?
@henryisnotafraid7 ай бұрын
Wasn't there some kind of experiment with magnets or maybe it was just with the magnetic field of the Earth where a long cable was let out from the space shuttle and it generated power?
@YewNayVerse7 ай бұрын
👀 is this in order? Expected "how do fn magnets work?" 😂 it's a reference on top of being a real question
@HairlessRaccoon7 ай бұрын
Nick from the Yard is gonna pop off
@iprobablyforgotsomething7 ай бұрын
Are magnets' strength measured by, or do they include the factor of, the weight of an object they can lift and hold before (as it appears to me) the strength of gravity's pull overpowers their ability to draw a magnetized object towards themself and keep it there? . Like, some fridge magnets are pretty weak. Sometimes they can't even hold their own plastic-shell container's weight up without falling, let alone that and the piece of paper you're trying to hold on the fridge's surface. . And what measurement terms etc. tell you how much material can there be, or how thick it can get, between the magnet and another magnetized object before it blocks (weakens?) the pull between the magnetic and magnetized object too much to be useful in keeping the material pinned in place between them?
@MakesCache7 ай бұрын
I wanna go to the magnet store
@thepupil27 ай бұрын
I'm imagining a person swallowing a magnet and then getting an MRI.
@xtieburn7 ай бұрын
Something that didnt seem to get explained: Why, if you can align the poles and create a magnet so trivially, do electromagnets not stay magnetic even when off? It seems like youd expect the generated field to align things, then have to scramble that alignment/degauss it to return it to its non-magnetic state, but that doesnt appear to be how they work. You might have to degauss a magnetic crane once in a while, Im not sure, but as far as Im aware it doesnt degauss after every lift.
@BattlewarPenguin7 ай бұрын
No wonder why I couldn't remember how mangets were made 🤣 Well if it works, why change it
@kirillsukhomlin30367 ай бұрын
I actually have seen some medical institutions state they have 6T MRI machines.
@williamStonehill73827 ай бұрын
Waiting for the monopoll talk
@simplynotedible7 ай бұрын
"How do you make a magnet?" Well, when a mummy-magnet and a daddy-magnet love each other very much...
@eligoldman92007 ай бұрын
I’m curious to get do magnets have 2 poles. Do single pole magnets exist?
@alien92797 ай бұрын
Monopoles are something we're looking for:) PBS space time has a breakdown on it