NO CICADAS WERE EATEN IN THE PRODUCTION OF THIS VIDEO. Do you think all the frequencies are happening on this one mechanical device, or do you think there are multiple animals making the call at different frequencies? I'm leaning towards the wobbles being the higher pitch sounds, and the "progressive buckling" being the lower pitch sound.. I think it would be SO cool to partner up with someone and write a paper on this. On the Ridge Wallet.... I worked it out with Ridge so you can get a free airtag money clip on orders over $76. They were cool and said yes. If you enjoy yours half as much as I enjoy mine it's worth it. Here's that link: www.ridge.com/smarter ! Thanks for considering supporting the sponsor!
@meritholdingllc1237 ай бұрын
I love that sound!
@ridethecurve557 ай бұрын
I interpret it as 'sequential buckling'. In any event, it's absolutely fascinating!
@aaronbeverage58177 ай бұрын
Is it possible that the muscles are making sound when the wave from each bucling segment travels down and back up? Kinda like when you tap a high tensil fence with a piece of metal....
@HugheJaenus7 ай бұрын
The way the tymbal moves, reminds me of playing with bendy straws as a kid.
@glowingtrashpanda7 ай бұрын
I was always told that the two different sounds is that one is from the females & the other sound is from the males
@BrentMitton7 ай бұрын
I love how every Smarter Every Day video starts with: "Hey it's me Destin. I've been working on this video for 12-years."
@smartereveryday7 ай бұрын
HaHa...great point. I love this comment. It's weird that it's true... If you only knew what was in the archives. Curiosity is a way of life, and sometimes the opportunities don't present themselves all in one go.
@ElsweyrDiego7 ай бұрын
12 years in the future he will post a video saying he has been working on it since 2024 😁 that's the way dreams works, as long as we realize them one day it can pass years. he now is fulfilling every dream he had in all those years!
@waynegnarlie17 ай бұрын
11.5 million subscribers rarely happens to "on-the-fly" content providers. Take your time Destin.
@johnsmith-jq1uc7 ай бұрын
@@smartereveryday keep doing it however you do it, it works for us man.
@Acetyl537 ай бұрын
And I hate how "I love how [...]" comments are artificially pushed to drive the SNR of a comment section into the ground. Useless hyperemotional noise that baits for engagement.
@veritasium7 ай бұрын
There is so much amazing research-grade footage in this video! My favorite is 21:28
@osmia7 ай бұрын
Lol - Slo-mo facial contortions
@MissGimpsAlot7 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@4asovoi7 ай бұрын
Derek? :D Yeah, should be a gif.
@bpdp3797 ай бұрын
I was certain it was going into his mouth…
@derrikarenal33087 ай бұрын
yeah well, where's the signed Talent Release Form (Cicada/Musician/Thespian).
@mundanestuff7 ай бұрын
I love how you refuse to acknowledge the increasing number of cicadas crawling on you as the video progresses. That's a great gag that needs to be applauded.
@I-am-Hrut7 ай бұрын
What cicadas? I don't see any cicadas. Cicadas don't even exist. You're crazy. Probably just some smudges on your screen.
@D3nn1s7 ай бұрын
@@I-am-Hrut i cant see it either, you got a timestamp @OP?
@jonnyphenomenon7 ай бұрын
Oh my word that was giving me the willies.
@I-am-Hrut7 ай бұрын
@@jonnyphenomenon You monster! Give the Willies back! Free the Willies!!!
@VAXHeadroom7 ай бұрын
"Hump? What Hump?"...
@scilabus7 ай бұрын
This is the best kind of videos : curiosity, scientific approach, talking to people. You can tell that this is a work of art (heart) as much as it is science and science communication.
@gregthorne42927 ай бұрын
“We borrowed a net from a gas station and went cicada hunting again” is about the most Alabama sentence I’ve ever heard. 😂
@Halfwalker7 ай бұрын
No - "Remembered not to eat the cicadas" is the most Alabamamama sentence :P
@__Jess9107 ай бұрын
My favorite was. "What kinda tree is this?" "It's a cicada tree."
@RIZFERD7 ай бұрын
Why they're so small there? They're big here in Indonesia
@Jakob.Hamburg7 ай бұрын
@@RIZFERD Evolution.
@Rulerofwax247 ай бұрын
8:54 "Oh they're doing it!" felt like classic Alabama boy to me
@titan401CT7 ай бұрын
The tymbal reminded me of plastic bendy straws, and it behaved the same way when you press it down the middle and unpop it by folding. It's insane how a simple mechanism is so effective.
@elcorado837 ай бұрын
It would be interesting placing the straws in a similar sized hollow body, bending them, then playing back a recording of it at higher speed and comparing it to cicada noise.
@themodernarmbruster7 ай бұрын
That's EXACTLY what I was thinking!!!
@dksaevs7 ай бұрын
i was thinking a tape measure or Venetian blinds
@dlv57 ай бұрын
plastic pipe multi length extended have same way like straw
@kingtungstenworldwide44727 ай бұрын
Its incredible how it comes down to these collapsible membranes!! Good work, Destin!!! Also, as the man said, 3/4 timing. Next test, figure out why cicadas dont all fall into the same rhythm like the principle (cant remember the name of it) studied with a metronome.
@ElizabethLopez-hx6xv7 ай бұрын
Hey, entomologist here!! Looking at a range map it looks like Alabama and Tennessee are experiencing the emergence of Brood XIX, one of the 13 year cicada broods. I believe that is the only species of periodical cicada you'll be seeing. HOWEVER y'all still have annual cicadas, and several species of those by the looks of it! So that could be factoring into the calls at the larger scale. Also, just an FYI only males have tymbals but both sexes do make noise. The females flick their wings in response, so that is a dynamic you might also be missing when analyzing the male's tymbal. Just letting you know that this video was so cool. I love your mechanical engineering videos but when you do deep dives on the physics of biology it's just extra mind-blowing to me (yes, I'm biased lol). I'm from Texas so we don't get periodical cicadas, but I happen to be doing some research work in the northwest for the summer! Unfortunately still not really in cicada territory but I'm going to make my way out somewhere that does! Please update us once you've done some more analysis because it's so fascinating to see you work through this! (Also, you CAN eat cicadas. I've never tried it but I hear fried they're good!)
@jackdiaz56167 ай бұрын
I wonder what the females look like at 100000 frames per second. I'm sure the wing flicking sound mechanism is just as fascinating as tymbals.
@jaykim88517 ай бұрын
If you have a free weekend....drop by the suburbs of the Chicagoland area in Cook county. We have millions of cicadas here emerging.
@jeremypearson90197 ай бұрын
I wish this comment would go viral. This guy sounds really smart and fun--like he belongs in a video with Destin.
@dighawaii17 ай бұрын
Cool!
@markfergerson21457 ай бұрын
Good to see that Dustin’s citizen science is appreciated by actual academics. Good point about annual cicadas. In the mid eighties, in Phoenix Arizona, there was supposedly an emergence of three different cycles of cicadas. If I recall correctly there were seventeen, thirteen and *nine* year cicadas claimed. Could those nine year cicadas have been annuals that were mistaken for something else, or are there potentially other cycles that just haven’t been fully documented? Also, thanks for mentioning female cicada wing sounds. That was also mentioned in the news reports back then but wasn’t fully explained. I think you are right that they make a significant contribution to the overall sound spectrum recorded. Clearly Dustin needs to go out and find some females and get their spectrum so that it can be subtracted from the full recorded spectrum. Again, thanks for chiming in. This channel deserves more of this.
@Smokasaurus7 ай бұрын
I like how a cicada lands on Destin's windshield wiper and his response is to check his odometer and say "alright little guy, let's see what you've got"
@tynebaker7 ай бұрын
Bioacoustician here (professional animal eavesdropper), not a cicada researcher you were looking for though. This is lovely, so glad we’re getting nerdy about sound production and animal communication! Fun stuff to note, cicadas are not the only species producing multiple sounds or bands on a spectrogram. You saw this in your spectrogram too with human voice, we put a lot of info in those harmonics! Wild guess based on your footage, but I suspect with cicadas this is a sequential not simultaneously sound. Possibly one frequency is from the initial snap of the tymbal, and one from a resonance band from the wobble, body cavity or environment. I suspect the during chorusing it gets blended to two continuous bands, rather than sequential sounds. Birds on the other hand can create two simultaneously fundamental frequencies (primary sound not echo or resonance). This is due to independent control of the chambers of their syrinx (two independent voice boxes). Check out song sparrows on xenocanto or Macaulay library to see some ‘c’ shaped tracings (syllables) with multiple independent fundamental frequencies, ie two tones produced simultaneously from one animal. In theory with two sound producing tymbals, cicadas could and may do this too, just harder to catch on a spectrogram because I bet they are similar in frequency. Glad you’re staying curious about your world. 👍
@smartereveryday7 ай бұрын
I've never seen the word Bioacoustician. Fascinating! Do you feel like appropriately nuanced every statement in this video?
@bigmike14327 ай бұрын
@@smartereveryday I was thinking one of the frequencies is the contraction of the hymnal and the other it the faster expansion
@gohawks35717 ай бұрын
Wow! What a cool job!😎✌️👍👍👍 Edit: Also, thank you for explaining that😊
@rhr-p7w7 ай бұрын
Something I found beautiful about some countries, is that you can make a living from extremely niche, specialized and amazing fields of knowledge. Bioacoustics! I never thought that was a thing. Spectacular!
@curiousfirely7 ай бұрын
@tynebaker Check out the podcast Ologies - I think you would be a perfect fit for a guest, and I would love to hear more about what you do!
@theslowmoguys7 ай бұрын
Immense footage 🤯
@smartereveryday7 ай бұрын
Thanks Gav!
@emilyelizabethbuchanan9987 ай бұрын
Should pin this one!
@7000fps7 ай бұрын
Here in Florida we have had cicadas fly to and land on you whilst using a hand/circular saw. There must be something romantic in that high pitch-screeching that the saw blade makes.
@ferretyluv7 ай бұрын
There are cicadas in Hampshire! Go film them!
@bumblebee42457 ай бұрын
@@7000fps same with a weedeater here in tn the string spinning creates a really similar frequency as the cicadas so i think that has alot to do with it
@fastoldman167 ай бұрын
Me yelling "DESTIN THE CICADA IS ON YOUR SHIRT" like a toddler watching Dora.
@pamelabuccilli59607 ай бұрын
me too i shouted get the bug off
@WrynnCZ7 ай бұрын
Yea he did it on purpose I suppose. :D
@jamesleyda3657 ай бұрын
River, forest, blueberry hill
@twosheepinatrenchcoat51167 ай бұрын
Did you see the one on his ear?
@E4S657 ай бұрын
It was cursed watching it just crawling around on him but also kinda funny
@PointB1ank7 ай бұрын
SmarterEveryDay, Veritasium, and Numberphile/Computerphile. The holy trinity of educational KZbinrs. I'm sure I'm missing a few other great ones as well.
@DJZG7 ай бұрын
Can't believe you forgot Tom Scott.
@PointB1ank7 ай бұрын
@@DJZG he's temporarily retired 😔 but yeah, he counts as well but in a different vein. Love Tom!
@siraryx7 ай бұрын
Vsauce
@TheRealSkeletor7 ай бұрын
Kurzgesagt.
@AllAmericanGuyExpert7 ай бұрын
Mark Rober
@UFOBobTV7 ай бұрын
I love the fact that a cicada is clinging to your shirt.
@smartereveryday7 ай бұрын
Wait... what?
@haydenwesley85307 ай бұрын
@@smartereveryday yeah. you knew. funny all the same.
@sudhirkamathi7 ай бұрын
When Destin said, we have to go cicada hunting, I touched my iPad screen where the cicada was on his shirt 😂
@PaulTomblin7 ай бұрын
And then he says he misplaced the one he was going to film. 😅
@ExtremeODD7 ай бұрын
To his shirt, to his ear, on his collar, just hilarious.
@Strlz_Remtachi7 ай бұрын
3:51 "I misplaced the one I had here so we need to go cicada hunting" me, who's been staring at his shirt for a whole minute: yeah I wonder where it went
@MarineTeen7 ай бұрын
Huh I wish this was live so could tell him.
@pampdsr17 ай бұрын
Yeh funny
@morticiaaddams78667 ай бұрын
I missed that! Too funny!😅
@bharatarja25257 ай бұрын
I'm counting how many times he say's "We don't eat them"
@markliamdairr7 ай бұрын
2:35 "What kind of tree is it?" "A Cicada Tree" LMAO that's gold
@SeanFerree7 ай бұрын
😆😆😆😆
@graog1237 ай бұрын
Excellent wordplay
@infinitytec7 ай бұрын
People around where I live keep calling cicadas "locusts" and I used to do that a lot when I was a kid. There was a tree near my house that we saw a bunch of cicada shells (or as we mistakenly called them, "locust shells") on and it became know as the locust tree. I believe it was actually a black locust, and my dad correctly identified it, but the association was made in my brain.
@Wildman-zh8lg7 ай бұрын
Locus a grasshoppers @@infinitytec
@adamb83176 ай бұрын
If I’m not wrong it’s a Boxelder Maple tree, Cicadas and other bugs love to eat them.
@jakob72707 ай бұрын
Ohhh now i get the pun in the title. „Clickbait“ is literally genius👍
@BillAnt7 ай бұрын
A good kind of clicky bait. hehe Wish he would have asked Ridge to print custom Cicada pictures onto the wallets, I may have considered getting one. ;)
@cptobvius7 ай бұрын
One of my favorite things about cicadas is the reason WHY they hatch in these big periodic broods. It’s called a “Predator satiation strategy” - by hatching all at once in the same area you overwhelm their predators ability to feed on them. All the birds, mammals, lizards, snakes that feed on them will gorge themselves, but barely put a dent in the massive brood that’s been building so the vast majority still get to breed. The predators likely have a very successful year and have more offspring than normal, but the next year that abundant food source isn’t there so their population will return to normal, making it ideal for the cicadas to pop out again 13/17 years later. If they staggered their emergence and breeding their predators would increase in population off of that food source and eat a much larger percentage of them.
@TriMarkC7 ай бұрын
Your guess is right. I watched another YT’r would reviewed those rhythms and the cicadas’ brood cycles outlasted all potential predators’ cycles. And not just predators’ mating cycles but also many of their lifespan cycles too, so predator memory couldn’t impact future generations hunting patterns for cicadas.
@snipegrzywa7 ай бұрын
It's not just the length, but also the fact they are prime numbers. Almost everything in the animal Kingdom is cyclical. By being 2 different prime numbers, they also help against things like migration and other things that doesn't allow the predators to "plan" for the broods @@TriMarkC
@TriMarkC7 ай бұрын
@@snipegrzywa Didn’t know that! Thanks!
@HippieMagic7 ай бұрын
It’s even crazier when you realize it’s so overwhelming that even catfish feed top water to eat them.
@RoadsideCookie7 ай бұрын
Do they come out at 13 and 17 years in the same area? If so, why would they both be primes, wouldn't it be at their advantage to come out at the same time to further overload the predators?
@wdude99977 ай бұрын
Can I just say that the sound design for the slow-mos were excellent
@raplapla93297 ай бұрын
yep, but an explicit note about it would have been nice as well
@xXJMatherXx7 ай бұрын
@@raplapla9329 He has an entire video about his foley artist and the important work that he does. It's pretty neat.
@lvachon7 ай бұрын
That progressive buckling mechanism reminds me of a bendy straw.
@smartereveryday7 ай бұрын
It absolutely does. It feels like it WANTS to buckle and kind of "cam over" with just a little pull of the muscle internatlly.
@nickrau13357 ай бұрын
I was on my way to say this! Like a bendy straw with a variable width. Or the ducting on the back of your dryer.
@mygirldarby7 ай бұрын
Thank you! I couldn't think of what it was reminding me of. That's it!
@Omniscient_Inquery7 ай бұрын
I agree lol. I’m curious if the amount of ridges that are buckled allows for a different sound or frequency, or if the cicadas can control it, kind of like words to communicate with other cicadas. I imagine two clicks could mean something different than 5 clicks.
@dustinclemens29197 ай бұрын
i was just thinking the same thing, my niece has a toy stretch wiener dog with the same "buckling arc mechanism"
@MagesIncorporated7 ай бұрын
*Hypothesis:* (please note, I'm not an entomologist, nor an acoustic engineer, merely a guy with a physics degree and too much time on his hands) 3 total tones (we don't see the bottom acknowledged in the spectrum analysis, but looking at the right side, it looks like it's around 100-200 Hz), whose causes are: • 100-200Hz: the sound of the tymbal fully closing hitting the abdomen upon closing (happens every ~6 ms, or ~167Hz) • 1000-1200Hz: the sound of the • 3kHz - 10kHz: the sound of the accordion-like structures being expanded during the reset of the tymbal (~15 folds per tymbal) • In this highest frequency band we see a fade toward ~15kHz, which would make sense considering the variance of size of the folds, and speed at which they contract. With some basic approximations for acoustic resonance with assumptions of a spherical thoracic cavity of r=0.33cm, we get a fundamental frequency around 16kHz. Considering the cicadas frequencies stop shy of this, I wonder what this would suggest about how resonance affects the thoracic cavity and the cicada as a whole. In fact, looking closer at the data at 7:22, we see that there are several "dark" zones in the relevant bands, particularly at ~8kHz, a bit below 5kHz, and potentially one around 800Hz. These seem to roughly match up to the subharmonics of a fundamental around 16kHz (the 1/2, 1/4, and 1/20 subharmonics, respecitvely). The 1/3 subharmonic looks like it may have some constructive interference, which puts me at a bit of a loss, however.
@rodneymeyer88357 ай бұрын
There is a significant clue in the bandwidth of the 1 kHz tone(~20% bandwidth ) and the 3-10Khx tone(~300% bandwidth). After the tymbal buckles close the membrane vibrates like a guitar string. This leads to a remarkably pure tone with small bandwidth(it is sinosoidal). When the tymbal buckles close it is producing a square wave. When you do an FFT of a square wave, you get a very broad bandwidth. The buckling occurs in 0.1ms or faster which gives the 10KHz upper bound but because it is a square wave you get the broad bandwidth 3-10KHz
@Kitteh.B7 ай бұрын
You missed your explanation for the 1k-1.2kHz band!
@alekseykuleshov1117 ай бұрын
Im barely physics enthusiast but my first thought was to measure different frequencies: single arch buckling vibrating, single arch collapsing and all arches poping back up and try to match them with recorded sound frequencies.
@spencermonckton62657 ай бұрын
Entomologist hijacking this to add: I've always understood the loudest noise to be the "click" (short buzz) caused by the inward buckling of the membrane (i.e. the full set of ribs). The relaxation and unbuckling is much quieter, but obviously higher frequency. And that initial contraction is STRONG because there's a lever involved inside the cavity. As for the wobble, the flexible membrane of the tymbal is rich in resilin, an elastic protein that can be as much as 97% efficient. That might explain the very high frequency of the wobble, like a super efficient drumskin. Speaking of: when the muscle relaxes, the membrane is pulled back into place by a thick pad of resilin along the top margin of the tymbal. So, that part happens fast but passively - there's less force to overcome.
@Hobbychemiefreak7 ай бұрын
I don't think the high frequencies (3-10kHz) are due to the reset of the tymbal. Firstly, it looks like a rather smooth process. Secondly, the frequency band is matched rather well by the vibration of the membrane after an arch collapses, which has periods of about 0.15-0.25ms. Crucially this is not constant since it depends on how much of the membrane is vibrating, i.e. how many arches have already collapsed. This is visible on the slow-mo footage. The 1kHz band matches how often an arch collapses, this happens a little faster than once every millisecond. I don't understand the low frequencies though. Your suggestion of the tymbal fully closing doesn't appear plausible to me since it doesn't look like that would happen about once every 6ms. Since we can hear distinct chirping sounds a few times a second that would be more like once every couple of 100ms. Possible explanations could be unrelated background noise, or perhaps the whirring of flying cicadas, but that's a bit far fetched.
@jordansickels117 ай бұрын
The way the ridges "pop" in and out reminds me of 3d printed compliant mechanisms. Where the mechanisms have multiple stable states, they can "pop" between. Awesome video!
@archerkid027 ай бұрын
Was going to suggest the same thing! It's like a light switch, stable in two positions that clicks and makes noise when you flip it. But it's a dozen switches in a row, so applying force flips them progressively until the force is released in this cascade. So maybe the stressed position is a low energy point but unstable so that it's easy to fall out of that into the more stable position.
@mrjackrabbitslim17 ай бұрын
@@archerkid02 They should rename the insect to cascadas
@hypervious88787 ай бұрын
I've also heard that is called a 'bi-stable mechanism': only holds a stable form in two positions, so it's intolerant to (quickly avoids/escapes) anywhere in between.
@ronmancvu7 ай бұрын
I've heard those called "flextures."
@jackpeterson66707 ай бұрын
the easiest way to do something like a bistable mechanism like that, is by puling the corners of the short side of a piece of A4 or letter size paper together(towards you) and pull the other short end towards you. it doesnt have to destinctive stable modes, but a start for getting to understand this part of material physics
@AbdulAleemShekhani7 ай бұрын
The number of cicadas increasing on Dustin's shirt as the video goes on is HILARIOUS!
@josiahslack87207 ай бұрын
And how he carefully doesn't acknowledge them.
@smartereveryday7 ай бұрын
@@josiahslack8720 Acknowledge what?
@TiredMomma7 ай бұрын
The one on the ear had me rolling 🤣
@sdt01o17 ай бұрын
I was waiting for a shot at the end with a Destin-shaped swarm of cicadas 😆
@x--.7 ай бұрын
I had ot keep rewinding because my young daughter kept bursting out laughing and saying to the screen, "it's right there!"
@Nighthawkinlight7 ай бұрын
Dude that wobble looks to me like a diaphragm stretched over a resonant cavity. I've explored this before and usually a diaphragm causes the fundamental resonance to decrease in frequency, but in this case since the diaphragm doesn't totally enclose the opening of the cavity it might mean that the mechanical resonance of the arches is exactly equal to the cavity resonance. That would be pretty fascinating. If you calculated the frequency of the wobbles and knew the cavity length it would be pretty straight forward to find out if the two resonances match. Just assuming a 2 inch long cicada with a cavity half its body length the fundamental frequency (assuming it's approximate to a close ended tube, not something more complicated like a helmholtz resonator) should be 3375 hz. I think 2 inches is probably on the large side for a cicada, and the pitch should be higher the smaller they get. You might be able to determine the size distribution of the insects just by analyzing the sound.
@teresashinkansen94027 ай бұрын
The cavity can also be a half wave or even quarter wave resonator. From the time counter it took a little more than 1ms for an oscillation so it seems to be somewhere around 800-1000 Hz. Also hat sudden snap could produce a sharp spike on the sound and maybe produce higher frequency harmonics.
@00linered7 ай бұрын
Ok, I'm looking it like this: -If you use both hands to hold each end of a very strong spring and then try to compress it together, it is going to want to bend away, and if you tilt your hands it will try to bend the other way. -Each of those arches is engineered to bend and snap back like a spring, and the muscle is just tilting those ends of the spring enough to get them to snap inward. -Therefore, it looks like the wobble is just a result of the mechanical stress in the springs when they snap.
@LofiTurtle_7 ай бұрын
Interesting that your 3375hz number is almost exactly half of the center of the higher frequency band (6-7khz). If that's an accurate approximation, then it seems like we're mainly hearing the first overtone of that cavity. I don't know enough about this kind of physics to know why the fundamental would be absent, but it's interesting
@xjustinjx7 ай бұрын
If it has a cavity radius that's larger than the neck opening radius you have to do helmholtz resonator math to find the fundamental I believe.
@AvgGamerGuy154 күн бұрын
20:12 the sponsor segment was very creative… I may not care too much for watching these parts of vids normally, but how you go about it is fun 😂
@BobbyDukeArts7 ай бұрын
That was awesome. I had no idea the sound they make worked that way. It's so elegant. Excellent video dude!!
@MisterPulley7 ай бұрын
What are you doing here? Aren't you still running form the cops?
@timothymonk13567 ай бұрын
Doing some quick maths, the delay between each arch buckling is ~0.9ms, which lines up with the 1,000-1,200Hz band, the oscillation between buckling is every ~0.3ms, which lines up with the lower end of the 3,000-10,000Hz band, and the time between each arch unbuckling is ~0.1ms, which lines up with the top end of the 3,000-10,000Hz band. So I think the buckling process adds a quiet drone to both bands, but the unbuckling is what gives the loudest 5,000-7,000Hz band
@Blorkus7 ай бұрын
I knew someone would do the math, I was half tempted to. Nice 😎
@smartereveryday7 ай бұрын
That's what I saw as well!... but I didn't want to come down and definitevely say it until I spoke to some experts. I was afraid a Cicada expert would pop up and say "oh you've got this totally wrong". I'm not a fan of misinformation and decided to confine this video to observation instead of drawing conclusions about an area I'm not an expert in (acoustics and entomology).
@bovanshi65647 ай бұрын
Would the completion of one cycle also add another sound at around 200Hz then?
@Werbel7 ай бұрын
@@bovanshi6564 It does, you can see a line on the spectrogram between 100-200Hz.
@barcodenosebleed54857 ай бұрын
Not that I don't trust math, but I feel like it's backwards. Each buckle occurs periodically at a slower pace, but the sound it produces is a shorter, higher pitched transient. The wobble is much closer to a sine wave. And idk, just listening to the slowmo sound here on my monitors, the wobble is fairly deep. Seems like when sped up the alignment would make more sense that way. But I could be wrong. Pulled up a video of a single cicada and also hear something close to the 200hz mentioned above which seems to correspond to each cycle as if it modulates with the tension of the muscle as a whole. Maybe I can pull the audio off this and bring it in to Audition to manipulate and go the other direction with the single bug clip I found. Building a scaled up mechanism seems like an interesting project.
@Appl_Jax7 ай бұрын
Man, that looks wild. Especially with how the Tymbals are moving so smoothly and everything else is stationary. Feels like watching an old school cartoon where you can see the movable items in a scene and the background.
@Sickzero6 ай бұрын
This shows exactly why your channel was the first I ever subscribed to back in the day... Making interesting themes easily and entertaining approachable!
@paulushdk7 ай бұрын
8:55 "Oh, they're doin it. They making other cicades" lol
@elivaughan11927 ай бұрын
"I found a 10 year old jar of jelly in my fridge." Same man... same.
@PastorJamesGillespie7 ай бұрын
But finding a ten year old carton of milk in your fridge is not the same. The jelly, purple, still after all these years but the Milk, in the ever-expanding jug, displaying the racial fabric of modern society, hues from the palette of life.😂
@smartereveryday7 ай бұрын
My brother
@stuffffuts34807 ай бұрын
@@PastorJamesGillespie Reminds me of the time I drank an entire glass of milk before realising it was spoilt 😜
@smolda164L7 ай бұрын
but 10 years from now you'd be probably having like second or third fridge and not being able to have these forgotten mysteries in fridge anymore :-D It's like automatic old-food-selection... but if you move them from old fridge to brandnew fridge....hmmmm 😀
@MyBelch7 ай бұрын
@@PastorJamesGillespie also purple.
@scotthulslander34097 ай бұрын
[Destin laughing and giggling] has got to be my favorite subtitle that I've seen on the channel so far
@LieutenantNuggets7 ай бұрын
Gordan is an absolute sound engineering genius. This guy deserves more credit from the subscribers for the work he does for this channel
@smartereveryday7 ай бұрын
Gordon's talents and interests are incredibly diverse. He's a good father, composer, loyal friend, game designer, product manager, sound designer... Just an overall good guy. He's a top-shelf human and I'm grateful that our paths crossed so many years ago. Gordon's company website: ashellinthepit.com/
@cptobvius7 ай бұрын
So how was the audio made for the slow mo shots? Is the camera actually picking up that audio? I thought it would be done completely separately but that foley work would be too impressive if done independently. So I guess it is actually picking up that audio?
@J.C...7 ай бұрын
@@smartereverydayand he obviously plays guitar. That's always cool in my book 😁 Also... I assume you know scientists you can send this stuff to? You've got to be the first person that's ever done this.
@2jwalker7 ай бұрын
@@cptobviusno he makes all the sound effects for slow mo. those cameras don’t record sound
@Centermass7627 ай бұрын
@@cptobviusthe slow-mo sounds are made completely independent from the video from the creators imagination. Real slow-mo sound just sounds like loud static.
@JakeBourne137 ай бұрын
Who would have thought that cicadas make all that noise with essentially the micro equivalent of a bendy straw 😂
@SachiJones7 ай бұрын
Yes, bendy straws! haha, that's exactly what popped into my mind as well
@Me.is.Malhar7 ай бұрын
lmao 4:00 the "misplaced" cicada just chilllin on his collar
@moos52217 ай бұрын
That had me laughing. I wonder if it's CI though or a real one.
@Carl_with_a_k_7 ай бұрын
18:58 too lmfao it’s just crawling over his shoulder
@jetegtmeier717 ай бұрын
Good God it was making my skin crawl !!!
@sirreoser56687 ай бұрын
On his shirt in every shot since the very first shot (it's near his pocket first frame).
@smartereveryday7 ай бұрын
What? Where?
@derek170057 ай бұрын
Gotta say that Cicada mating was not on my after-church bingo card for this Sunday but was thorougly entertained and enlightened. Thanks Destin!
@sheilagirl707 ай бұрын
Both cicadas love each other very much, which it makes it more tolerable 😂
@Machtyn7 ай бұрын
Your sound designer was having a LOT of fun in this video!
@RobertMoser7 ай бұрын
I lived in SE Asia as a kid, and I remember clearly one year that there was a Chosen Tree a lot like your example, so highly saturated with cicadas that it was hard to believe. It was *so loud you couldn't get within 50' of the tree without pain*, and I'm not exaggerating in the least! The Tree happened to be the central point of a small traffic circle, and for the entire mating season, both roads had almost zero traffic during Screamtime. It was that intense. It's so cool after all of these years to be able to see the how of it all. Thanks for sharing this with us!
@mtrps_7 ай бұрын
which country in SEA?
@RobertMoser7 ай бұрын
@@mtrps_ Laos & Thailand. Parents were diplomats. 🙂
@s-smee7 ай бұрын
Reminds me of the old cheap metal blinds and running my finger down them. They would bend and rebound back in almost the exact same pattern as shown on the high res. Love this! Thanks @smartereveryday (Destin and team)
@mobjois7 ай бұрын
Outstanding job. When I saw the first slow-mo footage of the ridged membrane snapping in sequence I audibly exclaimed "Aww, no way!" Thanks for this, Destin!
@timkvernen48527 ай бұрын
"I come out every 17 years to get my groove on and end up on a notebook listening to a guy talk about the sounds his jalapeno jar lid makes." This is me as a cicada :)
@gamernerd71397 ай бұрын
For science, bud.. For F'in Science!
@lucklesspanther19297 ай бұрын
Spotting the cicada during the office shots was a super fun game, nice touch 😂😂
@thomester74 ай бұрын
I love how you're always having fun when doing a video. Thank you for this amazing content. Also 18:54 is just pure bug love
@cattywhompus10127 ай бұрын
I literally thought to myself about two or three days ago: “I am really curious about what’s going on with these Cicadas. How do they make that loud noise? I wish they had high speed footage of it. I bet that’d look awesome.” And then proceeded to watch the math of the cicadas and their predator cycles on numberphile or something and forgot about the rest until this video came up right now. I haven’t even watched it yet and just wanna say you nailed it. Most likely with the video, but already just the topic makes me giddy. Haha As a subscriber for some years now I just want to show some appreciation to you. I’m grateful for what you do and who you are. Your curiousity and generally optimistic demeanor have always been something to aspire to on a human level. Thanks for getting in the weeds and using that big wet brain of yours to accurately and concisely convey complex and interesting topics over the years. You’re the best. Also as an NDQ listener, I feel just a better sense of who you are as a person and it makes me as the consumer of your content feel at ease and more engaged knowing I’m listening to someone as decent as yourself and Matt. Anyways. KZbin comments probably not the best way to get you to see this, but felt obliged to rant on the internet for good. Now onto the video. lol.
@RonRay7 ай бұрын
Destin, we now have BOTH types of cicadas. I'm 75 years old and have lived most of it in north Alabama (same as you), and as you will remember, we always had "July Flies" here. Well, that was up until 13 years ago, when the smaller variety moved into north Alabama. The larger ones, that are green and grey, with dark colored eyes, have always been here, and although they emerge every 17 years, they alternate, and emerge every year (in "shifts", you might say), and that is why every year we have the large variety emerge in late July and early August. BUT.. 13 years ago, we had the smaller variety emerge in April/May. They are noticeably different, with red eyes, a smaller body and a higher frequency "song". So, beginning this year, we will be inundated with the small variety every 13 years until they begin rotating in "shifts", like the Larger "July Flies" and emerge every year.
@TriMarkC7 ай бұрын
LOL well, I can check Alabama off my potential retirement state… my wife abhors cicadas! So if they come out annually in AL… nope, she’s out.
@RonRay7 ай бұрын
@@TriMarkC True.. The larger variety emerge every July/August. But they are not as loud and as 'many' as these smaller variety. These smaller size are deafening.
@trying2understand8707 ай бұрын
In south central Mississippi, as a child, (I'm now 65) my Grandfather would have me, my siblings and various cousins, collect the dried husks. He would then dissolve them in acetone. He would use this solution like a varnish on his hand made wood products.
@iamcyndelaq35157 ай бұрын
The Cicadas tymbal reminds me of corrugated straws and accordions. Also, their wings are gorgeous!
@sibayonchatterjee85963 ай бұрын
I am reading the creative comments of you all. Though I was a student of Zoology but these animal behavior was unknown to me. Last year At the foreat area of Neora valley National park Those tiny creatures and their music gave me a healing in my soul. I recorded their communicative noise pattern which now makes me thrilled before my sleep. WHAT A BEAUTY OF NATURE AND HER CREATION.
@pipecleanermaster7 ай бұрын
I have wanted to know how this worked for almost as long as I have understood what insects were and how noise was made. Thank you so so much for making this video!
@NathanielSpencerNomadn8dagr87 ай бұрын
It's like a tambor door from a cabinet. Look at a corner cabinet that hides a mixer or a roll top desk and it makes a version of that sound. It even looks like it. This is awesome! Thank you!
@jamesmnguyen7 ай бұрын
11:50 Imagine being abducted by an alien, placed on a giant piece of paper and they start drawing a diagram of your vocal system while explaining it to a camera.
@kwinzman7 ай бұрын
Waiting 13 years underground to mate, just to get abducted....
@bryanteaston72645 ай бұрын
Well, it would certainly be better than the anal probe.
@davidwaynemain4 ай бұрын
@@kwinzman WHILE mating lol
@Dr3450Ай бұрын
" I have misplaced the Cicada here" as its crawling on his shirt collar, fantastic!
@andrewwaters17577 ай бұрын
I’m like 20 minutes from where this video was filmed, and my only input is that, especially in the morning I would hear ONLY the subway sound. I’ve been confused about this for WEEKS because I don’t recall cicadas ever making that sound.
@lukemullisen72527 ай бұрын
I'm a few hours north of Alabama and I don't remember the subway sound last year - just the hissing. This year we have a ton more, plus the humming subway sound. It used to disturb me when I first moved here and heard it - but now I love it. The trees are singing! Psalm 96
@sprayberry887 ай бұрын
Same! I told my wife that I don't think I've ever noticed the low roar that is the "subway sound". However, the longer they're around the more they sound like "normal" cicada sounds. Could be something to do with the average age of the cicadas we're hearing at this time? This brood has been fascinating for so many reasons.
@scottweber88077 ай бұрын
I have heard the periodic cicadas several times. I have never heard the “subway sound” unless the periodic cicadas have hatched that same year.
@asyouwish39927 ай бұрын
@sprayberry88. Your comment triggered a thought. Made me wonder if the change in sound over time which you described relates somehow to the fact that the cicadas shed their shells? New shells, new sounds? 🤷♂️ Thanks for sharing.
@michaelsotomayor50017 ай бұрын
the audio created to these images is insane. Whoever is doing that, big props to you!
@TheMetalButcher7 ай бұрын
It's the guy in the recording studio in the video!
@smartereveryday7 ай бұрын
Gordon's team!
@piorism7 ай бұрын
Putting artificial/foley sound over the slowmo footage really goes against the scientific spirit of the channel though ... I personally find that it gives an overproduced "made for TV" feel to these segments and cheapens them. I don't doubt that it involves a lot of work and talent, but it still feels out of place - at least to me.
@ZakDub7 ай бұрын
I usually fast forward through adds but your cicada addition was the absolute best. Ridge will be happy with your advertisement.
@jjb1974Ай бұрын
I was like, whoooo.... Those high-speed cameras are just as much amazing as those cicadas. Love these videos!
@johnbaker51997 ай бұрын
this man’s filing system is insane lol the fact you were able to know you had this video from 12 years ago and knew where it was to make this video is just incredible lol
@GOmegaPHD7 ай бұрын
hes a pro he probably has servers on top of servers haha
@alexcrosse99707 ай бұрын
It’s callled an “unfinished” folder
@sky01james287 ай бұрын
He has a whole spreadsheet and tupperwares full of HDDs😅. I caught a glimpse in the video where Linus helped him install a server in his closet
@adams.64147 ай бұрын
I laughed so hard when it cut back to Destin talking (18:32) and there was a Cicada on his ear. Just more and more started showing up as the video went on. Hahaha. I love your videos so good.
@AntLab7 ай бұрын
Wow, that’s some amazing videography! So glad you all shot this and shared this insect story with us!
@WrynnCZ7 ай бұрын
As musician I find this very interesting. Thanks Destin. The "approaching train rails sound" in the background sound got me hooked. And the actual shoots of organ witch makes sound? Incredible. I think it vibrates in 3/4 because when every 3rd wave happens, next "click" happens. In other words, you need force of 3 waves to do actual "click" as the force builds up. Its beat generator like no other.
@boppins7 ай бұрын
"loud and obnoxious" - I love the sound. I've always been attracted to "annoying" sounds, like someone tapping a pencil on a desk, or coke can tab clicking. The cicada sound is relaxing to me.
@dougg10757 ай бұрын
Me too
@redfish3377 ай бұрын
It's white noise. It'd be a lot more annoying if they stopped and started all the time.
@davidt35637 ай бұрын
Me too, especially from nature. There is a *whew I'm safe!* Comfort from them. If the Cicadas and crickets are quiet? It's spears up, kids in the cave and fire forward.
@kevinkuenn57337 ай бұрын
Annual cicadas are white noise, sure. These 13 / 17 year broods are just noise. Where I live they are everywhere, and they are DEAFENING. Like, rock concert loud. I have no doubt that if you measured the decibels outside my home right now, they would register as a level unsafe for human ears. There is nothing relaxing about it.
@allen-n4nn7 ай бұрын
We are hearing the first annual cicadas of summer now. With only a handful, they take turns making noise but later they'll form an orchestra! 😂 When they stop for the night, the frogs start. Nature's sounds is the main reason I enjoy backpacking.
@jaerogoth7 ай бұрын
18:55 the cicada going for a casual stroll over the shoulder was a nice touch
@williamburchfield39637 ай бұрын
I love that he says, "I've misplaced the one I had. . . ," while it is crawling on his shirt the whole time! I loved watching it crawl around his collar all the way through. Great gag! 😄
@bigmikeosg77537 ай бұрын
Your videos are the best on KZbin. I am blown away by your intelligence and also the way you share it with the audience. Everytime you drop a video I’m always glued to my seat! Thank you Destin!
@BlackShardStudio7 ай бұрын
I applaud your commitment to the decorative cicada bit.
@freejay60917 ай бұрын
it was indeed freaking me out :D
@crafty_badger7 ай бұрын
Ah, sounds of childhood. We have cicadas in south Russia, near Caucasus mountains. I grew up in a summer camp, and during afternoon break when everyone asleep there only silence and dronning of cicadas. Quite comforting tbh. )
@jacobsonnen96257 ай бұрын
Who ever designed the sounds for the slomo footage did a phenomenal job and a great video overall as well!
@osmia7 ай бұрын
+
@vclmacmichael22 күн бұрын
Amazing......reminds me of the air accordion......great video indeed!!
@jakubdraws3957 ай бұрын
I paused the video whilst you were outside to stop the wretched hum of the cicadas, yet the timbal did not cease. Such a sound is an inevitability everywhere this summer.
@g00dGuY347 ай бұрын
Destin for some reasons I haven't been watching your videos the past year or so. I recently went on a binge and caught up in these last couple of weeks. I've said it many times over the years, but I just want to once again thank you for harboring the curiosity we all have for the world and providing these videos in such an enjoyable format. I often think of the inspiration and lessons for life that your videos manage to provide, whether intentional or not. Much love from a long time viewer.
@JiveshPant7 ай бұрын
9:14 "What are you doing under there"............ Dude they need privacy 😆
The wobble appears to be the cavity resonance frequency. If you picture the timbal like the head of a drum, each buckling causes an impulse to the drum head and it subsequently resonates based on the volume of the chamber and the stiffness of the timbal.
@whirlybird19997 ай бұрын
The way the membrane collapses reminds me of bendable straws.
@TritonTv694207 ай бұрын
It's crazy how many different topics you cover
@smartereveryday7 ай бұрын
I'm grateful to be given the opportunity to explore the world. So fun.
@evanc.15917 ай бұрын
@@smartereverydayHey, the world is incredible, right? Blessed be God!
@shogga6903 ай бұрын
What is the name of app for analysing sounds at 6:21
@manickbarry3 ай бұрын
I think it’s spectrumview
@solid_sundown7 ай бұрын
Anyone else love seeing Destin running around catching Cicadas with a big ol' grin like a 5 year old? haha
@absolutmauser7 ай бұрын
Especially with his enthusiastic giggle 😂
@gfhrtshergheghegewgewgew17307 ай бұрын
me, trying to eat on sunday morning: destin: *shows up close cicada mating*
@gfhrtshergheghegewgewgew17307 ай бұрын
also what you're calling "progressive buckling" looks like an array of compliant mechanisms to me
@fasfan7 ай бұрын
I did not expect Cicada p@rn. Lol
@deplorablepiratecaptaingunberd7 ай бұрын
My chickens certainly loved them
@t.j13017 ай бұрын
how much do you save on chicken feed because of the cicadas? And because they're eating all of more insects is there a taste difference in the eggs?
@manamsetty26647 ай бұрын
Did you store those😊
@BouncingTribbles7 ай бұрын
If you want to harvest lots of bugs for your chickens you can collect a lot with a simple set up. You just need a wind tunnel with a light. You put a sack on one end of a pipe and a fan on the other end blowing into the sack. The tunnel has a midpoint entrance with a light in the tube. The idea is that the bugs fly to the light and get blown into the sack. If you put it next to your porch or outdoor seating you'll have to deal with a lot less mosquitoes too.
@ruthm13844 ай бұрын
Wow, you are smarter every day at encouraging people to watch ads!! How cool to show the slow mo cicadas while talking about the wallet. Kept me watching, although usually I just skip ads. 🤩
@andrewconquest85047 ай бұрын
Their tymbal reminds me of the accordion/collapsible straws you used to get as a kid from certain restaurants/theme parks
@christianstork10494 ай бұрын
18:33 at the ear!! (also wonderful footage and explanations!)
@TanoLocker7 ай бұрын
The best ever Ridge comercial of anytime !!!😂
@GooogleGoglee7 ай бұрын
9:10 Dustin pervert version: what are you doing under there 😅😅😅😂
@BrillPappin7 ай бұрын
My hypothesis: The subway rail sound is probably the reset sequence, that happens much faster than the buckle sequence.
@mathozi53847 ай бұрын
It should be the other way around, something fast creates higher frequency
@BrillPappin7 ай бұрын
@@mathozi5384 yes, understood. I would expect the squeal sound would be a higher frequency.
@cutterpatterson63687 ай бұрын
Hey Destin, Florence native here. This was absolutely fascinating. I’ve never known how they make that noise.
@horstnele7 ай бұрын
It´s like bending a tape measure backwards! Very interesting Destin
@jameswoods71327 ай бұрын
Excellent work. After performing my own sound analyses up the Chicago area on 17-year Brood XIII and finding similar frequency results (two peaks- 6.3 kHz and 1.25 kHz), my belief is that the higher pitched sound is Magicicada Cassini , and the lower pitched is M. Septendecim . Per a post on the Morton Arboretum’s webpage regarding the Spring 2024 Emergence. Link in comment. At that page are links to three species in the 17 year brood and four in the southern 13 year brood. At those links, listen to the “call” and “chorus” sound bites. I'm open to other interpretations/possibilities. If you're down south experiencing the 13-year Brood XIX, M. Tredecim and M. Neotredecim are the lower frequencies, and M. Tredecassini, and M. Tredecula are the higher.
@Rosakru7 ай бұрын
Here in the north of Thailand, the cicadas can be so loud that it's nearly impossible to hold a conversation or watch a video at normal speaking and listening levels. It's truly amazing.
@trashtrash21697 ай бұрын
Truly annoying...
@dbackscott7 ай бұрын
Great, now he’s tricked us into admiring bugs.😂
@YashaHarari7 ай бұрын
Cicadas have always been admirable. Soon, AI will convince everyone of that.
@refrsh7 ай бұрын
1:42 that cicada crawling on him scared me lol
@Janduin457 ай бұрын
I too noticed it right around 1:42 and went "uuuuuhuhuhuhu"
@AbdelkaderBoudih7 ай бұрын
That his bionic mic.
@noahbarkelew60937 ай бұрын
@@AbdelkaderBoudihLook at his right, upper, collar (on your left).
@AbdelkaderBoudih7 ай бұрын
@@noahbarkelew6093 I know. I guess you didn't get the bionic part.
@noahbarkelew60937 ай бұрын
@@AbdelkaderBoudih I get what bionics are. I thought you were talking about the actual microphone he is wearing.
@hatemaslan3 ай бұрын
Very cool idea for an add and the best thing is that they make it at the end of the video
@WeidauerMelts7 ай бұрын
21:31 best shot ever
@zephdeasey5877 ай бұрын
Meme material
@xxfodxelementxx7 ай бұрын
Reminds me of Silence of the Lambs
@Schmogel927 ай бұрын
These folds are basically "pop tubes" but merged with a membrane which has its own resonance frequency
@TheScottTracy7 ай бұрын
Videos like this are why standard television is failing. Loved it!
@Metal_Master_YT6 ай бұрын
This is my favorite insect, glad to see you covering it!
@PTMG7 ай бұрын
I think bendy straws are a better analogue than a can lid you can see there are several ribs like a bendy straw, and when they collapse they click I believe what is making the sound, is that essentially it's the sound of bending a bendy straw back and forth, but at a frequency of thousands of times per second Either the bending of a bendy straw, or expanding and collapsing it back and forth thousands of times a second
@TheCamperBowler7 ай бұрын
Unrelated: A SED video on how old fighter planes shot machine guns through their propellers would be incredible. I know the concept isn’t any more complicated than timing a piston engine, but the fact that it worked pretty flawlessly is still insane.
@emilyelizabethbuchanan9987 ай бұрын
Actually the Slo Mo guys did a video on EXACTLY this. All you have to do is search it in the youtube box.
@ZacKoch7 ай бұрын
That cicada being fondled in the beginning is like bruh let me goooooo😂
@meiam5456 ай бұрын
Thanks for capturing the amazing design of the common cicadas we hear around!
@NostraDavid27 ай бұрын
Cidadas: * being lovey dovey * Justin: "WHATCHA DOING UNDER THERE!?" 😂