Using hydrogen to light up the planet has got to be the biggest form of gaslighting.
@1jotun1366 ай бұрын
Take my vote and skedaddle.😊
@originalSiiiN6 ай бұрын
💀💀
@planetoforts6 ай бұрын
Or helium
@Oganessonproductions6 ай бұрын
I see what you did there!
@matthewboire68436 ай бұрын
Haha
@diogo7636 ай бұрын
I love how Wren´s show makes me feel like a kid again. Really captures that Bill Nye type of show
@BlueFlash2156 ай бұрын
I made a comment above correcting his math and errors. I'm one of the biggest fans of Wren's videos because he answers simple mechanical problems and does it on such an interesting way that one can show it to students and colleagues. I'm a mechanical engineer myself but I think there are too many comments by now for him to find mine that corrects the math.
@Uncle_Smidge6 ай бұрын
I feel like it shows what a little kid HE still is, which has its own charm!
@SunroseStudios6 ай бұрын
@@BlueFlash215we found it! interesting stuff!
@imdonewithyall6 ай бұрын
I love his energy in these. So happy, full of enthusiasm, and it shows in his facial expressions and hand movements. It's a joy to watch his joy I guess
@AllDayBikes6 ай бұрын
I said something similar, always love these kinds of videos he makes
@photoelectron6 ай бұрын
loved the Sims inspired reaction to the fire: 1) sees fire; 2) has an external reaction (oh no ! lifts hands); 3) approaches the fire without extinguisher or safety equipment and just are stressed in front of it
@Kualinar5 ай бұрын
Is in the middle of the fire and STAY inside the fire until told to get out of the fire or until they die.
@genevarailfan39095 ай бұрын
And there was a fire extinguisher on the wall right next to him!
@DustinPlatt6 ай бұрын
As someone who has been working in optometry and ophthalmology for 18 years, when Wren started talking about refraction, material index, focal point, etc, I got a little excited because I understood everything he was saying for once.
@Kalepsis6 ай бұрын
"Angle of incidence." "Ooh, yeah, baby, talk dirty to me."
@bomvouage48096 ай бұрын
I felt exactly the same way 😂
@kellymoses85666 ай бұрын
I learned that in high school physics.
@sentakeshi6 ай бұрын
AS SOMEONE WHO IS A 18 YEAR OLD 12 STANDARD INDIAN STUDENT , I UNDERSTOOD EVERYTHING HE WAS SAYING FOR ONCE..
@darkwatcher90316 ай бұрын
Medical physicist here, and loved seeing him come to the conclusion about the shadow cause
@DangerousDac6 ай бұрын
I can honestly say I have never ever wondered what would happen if the Moon was made of glass.
@titheproven9546 ай бұрын
Clearly
@Cubesquad-jc7uz6 ай бұрын
I wondered about moon being made of steel
@Heightren6 ай бұрын
Pun intended?@@titheproven954
@Barrett_Jesus6 ай бұрын
You don't need to be super smart to know what would happen...... Like have any of you ever burned ants with magnifying glass.
@Heightren6 ай бұрын
@@Barrett_Jesus finish the video mate
@FaynarsSaiqo6 ай бұрын
That visualization of the glass moon shrinking the sun to a dot is SO COOL! That definitely wasn't what I expected
@julinaut6 ай бұрын
I like how wren is slowly turning into photoreal kurzgesagt, it's a good evolution
@VadeInSpiritu6 ай бұрын
Hopefully without the globalist propaganda
@VadeInSpiritu6 ай бұрын
Hopefully without the globalist propaganda though
@VadeInSpiritu6 ай бұрын
But hopefully without the globalist propaganda
@lolliii54776 ай бұрын
too late he's already the entirety of the kurzgesagt team
@SrKrt5 ай бұрын
I’d love to see a channel dedicated to that
@ninjabiscuit6 ай бұрын
I feel like this is a Wren Mythbusters moment. "Aw, I didn't get the result I wanted. Let me invent a scenario where I DO get the result I want." Seriously, though, good stuff, man. Felt like I was watching a very well-produced science show.
@uesdtosignin10386 ай бұрын
This is the great video with so many scientific detail. But I think you forget "the penetration depth effect". Transparent object does absorb light too. For example, 10 meters of seawater will absorb about 75% of sunlight. Glass absorb light better than water because it is denser. So, moon-size glass ball's thickness will literally absorb all light before the light can penetrate the moon-size glass. I can't find and data about hydrogen gas but don't think light can penetrate 100,000+ km of hydrogen. There are so many hydrogen atom there. It is very likely that the photon will hit hydrogen atom there multiple times, again and again, until the photon get totally absorb.
@thenashus46 ай бұрын
Understanding the science behind all of this is one thing, but being able to explain it so concisely and easy to understand like Wren does is a huge talent in itself
@Rugras.6 ай бұрын
I appreciate your use of Moonlight Sonata.
@tobiasb80865 ай бұрын
Me too.
@Darkness-yn5us5 ай бұрын
Was looking for this comment
@frankleblanc87305 ай бұрын
yeah but what version exactly and by what artist? I wanna know!!
@omegastar2508Ай бұрын
@@frankleblanc8730 It's in the description of the video
@mattiasvaningen999615 күн бұрын
Now I know why I have that song in my head after watching lol
@aydenwright97826 ай бұрын
This is probably the coolest science video Wren has done yet. This one is just mind melting, no pun intended
@coolspyro16 ай бұрын
This really gives new meaning to "glassing" a planet
@luzyxl6 ай бұрын
HALO
@limewater40746 ай бұрын
HALO
@MadPower3516 ай бұрын
R.I.P Mandalore
@theradlad56156 ай бұрын
Wasn't Reach glassed and Africa nuked in the Halo Universe?
@exodiathomas9086 ай бұрын
@@theradlad5615 Yeah. Except if i remember correctly, It wasn't a nuke in Africa. A ship jumped to slipspace close to the ground
@AlanRogers2506 ай бұрын
Love when Wren does his stand-alone videos. Especially loved the "Wrender" joke when his computer was rendering.
@locinolacolino13026 ай бұрын
It's an open secret at this point that Wren himself is responsible for all the rendering, the computer is merely along for the ride.
@Pale_Kingg6 ай бұрын
I smell an unhealthy amount of dad jokes around this video
@AlanRogers2506 ай бұрын
@@Pale_Kingg You can NEVER have too many "Dad Jokes", signed A Dad.
@Jarodactyl5 ай бұрын
I only wanna come here to say that the shot of Wren's eyes inside the zeros at 2:00 did not go unnoticed. Made me chuckle.
@skivernatnjilten4936 ай бұрын
I was just writting a short story about aliens having nightmares about eclipses at their home planet. Screw that now.
@yugytomm6 ай бұрын
Sounds a little like Nightfall by Asimov.
@skivernatnjilten4936 ай бұрын
@@yugytomm -_- Well, screw me then.
@7evYT6 ай бұрын
@@skivernatnjilten493 Back to the writing board! lol. Nah, write it anyway brotha.
@wellshoot6 ай бұрын
Steal like an author, my friend. Your words are unique and your story will show your ideas in a unique way. There really aren’t any new ideas. All great authors took inspiration from other places. Don’t be afraid to write something just because someone else has a similar thought! If that were the case I would’ve given up writing immediately!
@Shadowkey3926 ай бұрын
@@yugytommyou beat me to it.
@Crazael6 ай бұрын
In the Troy Rising series a guy uses a series of space mirrors to cheaply mine asteroids before using that same network to melt the ships of an invading fleet because at that point, the difference between "mining laser" and "anti-ship laser" is what you call your laser. And for any pedants out there, the whole "it's not really a laser" thing is brought up and dismissed because the guy who named the network of mirrors is explicitly using the colloquial definition of "laser", a "focused beam of light".
@DaSuDanesi6 ай бұрын
Reminds me of the Kzinti Lesson: If your spacecraft's reaction drive is efficient enough, your vessel is never disarmed unless totally disabled.
@erichurst78976 ай бұрын
@@DaSuDanesi yeah, a fusion drive like in the Expanse would act like a massive cutting torch; there were several times in the books where they are careful to keep their drives pointed away from other ships so as not to melt them.
@niceguy1916 ай бұрын
Is the point of the series to use old Greek/Roman stuff but in a sci fi setting? The title mentions Troy, and you've just described what's essentially an Archimedes ray
@keiyakins6 ай бұрын
Schlock Mercenary did it too, using Earth's ring of controllable mirrors to burn Dom Atlantis (which then forced Dom Atlantis to put up shields which trapped everyone inside which was the actual goal...) This similarity isn't too surprising given the history of how Troy Rising came to be, though, is it?
@vylbird80146 ай бұрын
@@erichurst7897 The Kzinti incident is specifically a failure of intelligence: The Kzinti did have access to an advanced means of gathering intelligence on a ship before attacking, but the only question they thought to ask is "Does this ship have any weaponry?" The answer came back as a firm no, so they attacked. They never thought to ask if the ship had any non-weapon systems which would be easy to repurpose as a weapon.
@Seve_Bot6 ай бұрын
8:50 that's actually a reused clip from another video of his. Reusing clips helps with production cost, production speed, and most of the time nobody even notices. Keep up the great work!
@elijahadams10556 ай бұрын
When the glass moon casted a regular shadow, I was expecting the awnser to be "no material can stay translucent at such a large scale."
@userjames20096 ай бұрын
Yes, even if glass was something like 99.999% transparent, as the glass becomes thicker it absorbs more light, and if the glass was thick enough it would end up absorbing all the light.
@Smorb426 ай бұрын
@@userjames2009 I wonder if the edge would be interesting. It would be thin enough to still transmit light.
@marcusrauch42236 ай бұрын
I guess you could then see a bright ring that fades towards the center. Like in inside out event horizon observed from the outside.
@MorganSaph6 ай бұрын
@@marcusrauch4223 Perhaps it's similar to what a White Hole could look like
@LineOfThy6 ай бұрын
technically refraction is only considered when entering and leaving the material, so if the moon was 100% glass it would still work
@MrVoidum6 ай бұрын
Near the end: Aliens: WRITE THAT DOWN WRITE THAT DOWN
@locinolacolino13026 ай бұрын
Who's the more advanced civilization now? Humans - 1, Aliens - 0
@ZeroXSEED6 ай бұрын
Solar focus weapon is actually common in Scifi
@ryanakers13726 ай бұрын
Guess we know the plot of Independence Day 3 now, lol 😂
@xj_overlander6 ай бұрын
This was a fun video to watch. Using some of the stuff I learned in my college physics classes. Nice to see the applications outside of the textbook. Love this.
@MPdub6 ай бұрын
So I can confirm. I experienced a full eclipse of the sun and one of the things that struck me the most and was not ready for, was just how quick it turned cold. The eclipse happened on a sunny day too... but that made no difference at all. Was freaky.
@CountryMusicMann6 ай бұрын
I experienced that too. The temperature just plummeted from late summer-ish 80s to what felt like mid-fall 60s. And the crickets started freaking out, which doesn't happen when it's ACTUALLY mid-fall. I didn't even particularly care about the diamond ring in the sky anymore; the world just stopped making sense for a couple minutes, and it was fascinating.
@user-rl4tg2mr9n6 ай бұрын
That's because the ground is very good at absorbing heat radiation but not very good at retaining it. So once the source of heat radiation was removed, the ground quickly cooled down, thus cooling the surrounding air
@PumpkinHoard6 ай бұрын
@@user-rl4tg2mr9n Roads retain heat rather well however. At my old house there were about 10 cats within a very small area. If you went out at like 2am when there were no cars on the road it wasn't uncommon to see groups of cats lying on the still warm tarmac.
@bigsmall2466 ай бұрын
A sunny day would make the temperature effect more extreme compared to e.g. a cloudy day where you're not getting much sun in the first place
@MPdub6 ай бұрын
@@bigsmall246 True, that will absolutely make a difference. But it's even more pronounced. In fact, I failed to mention, that coldness creeps in before the eclipse is even full. It's like the cold is an entity (as hippy as that may sound). And regardless, it's not only _very_ cold, but the speed at which it switches is something that just doesn't happen "naturally". Or maybe better said: doesn't happen in nature, outside of an eclipse. In seconds it turns *really* cold (regardless of weather it was hot before). (and I live in a country with heavy winters) You'd imagine that maybe some heat would be stored, or something similar... at least I did.
@temtor6 ай бұрын
You already KNOW the video is going to be amazing when Wren has a weird idea
@ALBINO1D6 ай бұрын
09:57 love that crashing lens y'all added.
@jasonpatterson80916 ай бұрын
Even more disappointing is that glass isn't perfectly transparent, even low iron glass has an absorption coefficient of ~0.015 cm-1 (every centimeter of glass will absorb 1.5% of the light's intensity, more or less). By the time you get to more than a few meters of glass you've basically got a completely opaque material, even if it's glass. You'd get a normal eclipse because the moon would simply be opaque like normal. EDIT: @AgentX2006 did the math and it turns out that you'd no longer be able to see the Sun at around 20 meters thickness.
@biosdilt13996 ай бұрын
Yeah I was expecting that to be the first "disappointment", and then ignore the absorption for the rest of the video, still cool tho
@AgentX20066 ай бұрын
This can't be correct as I'm almost certain sea water with all it's suspended particulate matter blocks more light than glass, and it allows sunlight to be visible to almost 900m down. Per NOAA: Under water (where light decreases 10 fold with every 75 m of descent), the human eye theoretically can detect light down to almost 900 m.
@bastienK6 ай бұрын
@@AgentX2006the moon diameter is about 3500km, that's many times 900m. So, still possible that a glass moon is fairly opaque, compared to 900m of sea water.
@AgentX20066 ай бұрын
@@bastienK That's true. That is definitely enough to do it. I just focused on the few meters of glass being opaque as being incorrect.
@locinolacolino13026 ай бұрын
I would guess the compressed hydrogen would look like dense upholstery foam.
@kyloh87066 ай бұрын
the editing in this was fantastic, super compelling :D i love when wren has ideas like this and gets into the physics of everything!
@darthjurnson91866 ай бұрын
Not a lot of "sciencey" stuff gets me worked up but this video and all the questions and answers genuinely got me super excited from how awesome it was. And no I don't know a better way to word it lol
@iamwill7376 ай бұрын
Thanks for shining a light on this
@ZigCade6 ай бұрын
your profile only makes it better
@andreashansen53136 ай бұрын
@@ZigCade Shine on you crazy death ray
@dr.pastrami52726 ай бұрын
With the dark side of the moon. What a guy.
@0Rookie06 ай бұрын
After you asked the first question of what would happen, I figured it would focus the light before the earth. But that glass eclipse is quite the revelation and frankly AMAZING! Like a giant window into the 180 lens at the location of the moon. Incredible!
@JGAcquiesceNZ5 ай бұрын
What is the moon made of? Apollo: “GLASC”
@jesperhaafkes36356 ай бұрын
"That's no moon, its a giant magnifying glass!"
@Skulduggery_TV6 ай бұрын
"It's too big to be a giant magnifying glass!"
@Elloliott6 ай бұрын
basically what the death star was lmao
@craighofmann6386 ай бұрын
@@Elloliott they DID use Kyber crystals after all, like many magnifying glasses...
@samsignorelli6 ай бұрын
"Now witness the power of this armed and FULLY OPERATIONAL hydrogen focusing sphere!"
@Tomax_Bren6 ай бұрын
I would of went with glass station, but I'm glad someone said it 👍
@branhan2151246 ай бұрын
Collapsing Gas Giant Death Ray is one of the coolest sci fi weapons I've heard of, nice work!
@karelpgbr6 ай бұрын
The mighty C2GDR, it even sounds properly sci-fi 😂
@solarstormgames6 ай бұрын
This episode was shot fantastically... *Claps* Thank you for your hard work making it look so good!
@_abdul6 ай бұрын
That was Enlightening.
@murilodude6 ай бұрын
Under a Glass Moon. One of my favorite Dream Theater's song.
@MycontentisgoldJerryGold6 ай бұрын
Wren could have just played the song and saved so much work. 😂
@SimoneDePascalis6 ай бұрын
oh there you are
@bhuiafuibawerf6 ай бұрын
Thanks, I was looking for this comment
@mugenjoyer-j9l5 ай бұрын
was looking for a comment about this lol
@guitarmichael3 ай бұрын
It’s not too late for Wren to make a visualizer for the Images and Words tour.
@ranpergames6 ай бұрын
I like the usage of the "Moonlight Sonata" at 12:00
@RelativelyBest6 ай бұрын
Yeah, this guy is one lab accident away from becoming a super villain.
@theotherclyde6 ай бұрын
Another brilliant video. I completely enjoyed every second that did not have background music in it.
@troggo-art5 ай бұрын
lmfao
@UNBOXBURRITO5 ай бұрын
Please don't stop making these videos, it's like the modern more intense Bill Nye The Science Guy
@maxmoller6 ай бұрын
2:36 The Statue of Skeleton was a nice touch. 😂
@jnevercast6 ай бұрын
Haha yeah I love sneaky gimmicks like that
@joelnsalah6 ай бұрын
Liberty and Freedom gone ☹︎
@DJLCBrown6 ай бұрын
This sounds like an idea that came up during a tabletop campaign.
@TrophyGuide1016 ай бұрын
Like an idea Liu Cixin would come up with
@Hurricane_Activity5 ай бұрын
3:48 Debby there: *yay I’m in the simulation!!!!*
@Lord_eBatts6 ай бұрын
In the words of former Corridor intern Mark, "SPACE IS SO COOOOOOOL!"
@seanmsw59775 ай бұрын
*Um, ACKTSHYUALLY*
@Thoran6666 ай бұрын
An interesting companion video is "Magnifying The World's Brightest Flashlight" by The Action Lab. No matter how hard you focus the light, you'll never get hotter than the origin. Great work again Wren on mixing CGI and real world questions.
@AirLancer6 ай бұрын
Well, that makes perfect sense. You only have as much energy as you started with. All magnification does is focus energy that'd normally be spread out onto a much smaller point. It shows just how much energy the sun is constantly pouring down on earth when you can melt metal with a lens no bigger a person's wingspan.
@PaulBrunt6 ай бұрын
@@AirLancer It's not about energy it's about thermal equilibrium, the reason it can't get hotter is because if it did then the Earth would be heating the sun. Magnification is a two way street.
@MOSMASTERING6 ай бұрын
Really? Even if the source is not super bright, but VERY large and you focus that into a small point? That would be hotter than the origin, no?
@tomtarrell6 ай бұрын
@@MOSMASTERINGit would violate the second law of thermodynamics. If you had a situation where you could make heat flow from the Sun to an area that’s hotter than the Sun then you‘d be getting heat to flow from cold to hot without expending energy which violates that rule. The smallest point that you can focus down to if you use all the light from the source is the same size as the source. If you want to focus to a smaller point than that then you have to lose some light and therefore energy. It’s called the conservation of entendu.
@winter95236 ай бұрын
@@MOSMASTERING let's think of a magnifying glass and a solar panel together. The solar panel can only catch the light that hits it, and will convert that into its equivalent power (with loss as the panel heats up, but let's ignore that for now) The magnifying glass just squeezes that light like a funnel. It can still only put out as much energy as it's put in, so while it might be "hotter" since it's more focused, but it still only has as much power as the surface area can catch.
@Fareo6 ай бұрын
These are my favorite Corridor videos. Keep up the awesome work!
@jowiwa6 ай бұрын
Wren, you're my favorite on this channel. Love your passion and ability to break down complex topics into these easy to digest and fun to learn episodes.
@TroutTruck6 ай бұрын
Feels wren had a lot of fun making this vid in particular
@arcticbanana666 ай бұрын
I remember in my 8th-grade science class we watched a video about carbon, and at one point they used one of those magnifying glasses at 1:36 to make a diamond pop into a puff of smoke.
@GraemeGunn6 ай бұрын
I love these! Never stop making them, Wren!
@Adam-zt4cn6 ай бұрын
What about heat losses? The light has to travel through over 3 thousand kilometers of glass. With each meter, the power falls exponentially... If anything, a glass moon would appear as a black sphere, not as a shiny crystal ball.
@AntneeUK5 ай бұрын
Keeping the temperature in the studio at a very nice 69°F 👌
@cruejones7426 ай бұрын
So basically Crematoria from the Riddick movies.
@Hugh_Jas6 ай бұрын
Not even a little bit. Crematoria is impossible. Any planet close enough to its star that it reaches 700 degrees during the day would not even cool to a survivable temperature with a ~26 hour night cycle at the equator, never mind fluctuating so wildly that it has has an instant freezing effect within minutes of the sun setting. Even if there was no atmosphere at all (which there is on Crematoria) it would take more than a few minutes for a 700 degree surface to reach the absolute zero of space.
@planetsec96 ай бұрын
@@Hugh_Jas it's possible in the Riddick universe though
@poofytoo6 ай бұрын
This is such an awesome video produced with so much love and creativity. I feel so personally invested in this video doing well for some odd unexplainable reason
@gerardoramirez1154 ай бұрын
"literally throwing shade" is hilarious
@BlueFlash2156 ай бұрын
You have a calculating mistake in the very beginning! I'm trying to explain with an example. What you are really doing is increasing the power density (that is the the amount of energy deposited in a unit area over a unit time). This generally causes a rapid increase in local temperature since energy is deposited faster than it can diffuse into the surrounding material and ultimately the air. Normal, unmagnified sunlight has a power density of about 1.4kW/m^2. What the lens does is collect the energy from a larger area and shrink it to a much smaller point. Let's say we have 3" handheld magnifying glass, and it focuses light down to a circle about 1/16" across. The total energy collected by the lens is 7.069in^2 x 1.4kW/m^2 = 6.385 W. This power is concentrated into a region of area of 0.0031 in^2, so the density is 3,226 kW/m^2 in that small region. In general, the total power delivered to the focal point scales with the area of the magnifying glass. That means you only need ~41% larger glass (by diameter) to get double the heat transfer. The power density depends on how well focused the lens can get, and is equal to 1.4kW/m^2 x (rlens/rpoint)^2 . So if the focal point is 100x smaller (by diameter) than the actual lens, the energy density is 100^2 =10,000x higher than it is in normal sunlight. Furthermore, an often overlooked fact. If the moon would be a perfect set magnifying glass, the moon itself would melt immediteltly at the tip. Even if glass absorbs very little energy/temperature when light passes through, in the end it does and will be enough to melt the focal point of the moon, therefore destroying the magnifying glass in an instant. German mechanical engineer here. If found part of this answer on reddit and copied it, after I did the math. I came to a different solution but in the end both solutions speak the same language. The magnifying glass comparison in the beginning is wrong. The moon melting point I did on my own. I will write it down in a later edit.
@SunroseStudios6 ай бұрын
ohh interesting! thanks for the correction!
@nagolici32066 ай бұрын
i was wondering what would happen if moon wasnt glass sphere but flat surface glass (like giant magnifying glass). so if i understand you correctly, the moon glass would melt, because glass cant hold such high temperature? but lets say that it wouldnt melt, would then earth get vaporized?
@mariuszr44706 ай бұрын
@@nagolici3206 I think that even if such light burst hit earth for a moment, the point of focused light would firstly heat earth atmosphere so much that the pressure of gas would increase instantly cousing pressure wave to destroy everything on its way. It woud also melt earth crust and cause upper mantle to magma flood the continent. The light from the sun also contains infrared light (more than 50%) which have lower dispersion angle but (BUT!) everything depends on glass compound. Some types of glass are more transparent to IR than others.
@toweri_li6 ай бұрын
Wouldn't the enormous thickness of the glass Moon also affect the result? When the Sun's radiation travels through the 3 475 km of glass, it would suffer quite a bit of losses.
@hypnogri54576 ай бұрын
doesnt conservation of etendue limit the heat at each point inside the glass moon to the surface temperature of the sun? (it should actually be way below that) And the focal point should also be limited by that. The focal point shouldn't exceed the surface temps of the sun either
@Sh4dySam6 ай бұрын
Wren (& Crew), I love how much passion you put into these projects. Keep up the great work and stay curious!
@julianlove20445 ай бұрын
That was the smooth transition into an advertisement i've EVER seen
@thatrandomspaceguy6 ай бұрын
I miss old vids like this, cuz nowadays there's only reacts and recreation videos, which are boring. These are masterpieces
@AJB4D6 ай бұрын
@@thatrandomspaceguy to be fair Corridors react videos are the only ones I watch. As much informative as entertaining. But that is not the standard for those styles at all.
@Dave15076 ай бұрын
Why miss them, they are still on here, right?
@ignatius10786 ай бұрын
8:56 this part made me laught real hard 😂😂😂lol
@Tripp-y9b6 ай бұрын
"It's so beautiful!" [DEATH SOUND]
@squarebodycasewademckenney61903 ай бұрын
1:55 modern car headlights belike
@nochill66566 ай бұрын
I think you made a mistake at 2:30. The temperature wouldn't go higher than 5600 K because that is the temperature of the light source (the sun).
@nautsch6 ай бұрын
It took way too much scrolling, to get to this comment.
@JackieTheYeen6 ай бұрын
So what you're telling me is that we 𝘴𝘩𝘰𝘶𝘭𝘥𝘯'𝘵 turn the entire moon into glass? Well dammit there go my weekend plans.
@Rudxain5 ай бұрын
"Ferb, I know what we're doing today!"
@Hannah7Banana6 ай бұрын
Bro is answering a question we never even asked but I'm glad he did
@gadlicht46276 ай бұрын
So I am pursing grad degree in physics with focus on photonics and there is cool effect/s you forgot that limit how much light can actually be focused. As you focus light more and more, more energy is contained in smaller space and eventually this can destroy or heat up material until it can not focus light. Secondly, that focused energy can exert pressure and/or interfere with itself on itself that causes it to de-focus or expand outwards again. Thirdly, there is strange quantum uncertainty that goes up when you super-focus light that makes exact positions lesser known. All these effects, esp. first two are important in systems that use really high energy or focused light we make on earth, often these systems either blow up, can only work for nano-seconds or less, and/or are limited do to this. No material I believe known could really focus light at that scale
@ecrow696 ай бұрын
What about gravity? Could an alien species with a gravity based warp tech use said warp tech to focus light?
@matthewjohnson36566 ай бұрын
Xkcd covered this in his what if book. Long story short- you cannot take all of the light from a source and focus it into a smaller area to make that area hotter than the source. This defies the second law of thermodynamics.
@eccles996 ай бұрын
The video also ignores the fact that glass has an absorption coefficient. I would think that after a kilometer or so, any light would be be completely absorbed and the glass sphere would be effectively as opaque as rock.
@megapro1256 ай бұрын
Given the transmittance of glass, would a 3500km glass moon even let any appreciable amount of sunlight through?
@BobbySacamano6 ай бұрын
@@eccles99 this VFX video also says the moon is made of glass.
@erebostd6 ай бұрын
11:44 the mondscheinsonate (moonlight sonata) in the background was subtle, but noticed 🌙 😁👍 (oh, it gets louder later, cool 😁)
@comparatorclock4 ай бұрын
gonna call magnifying glasses "photonic funnels" from here on to confuse everyone around me
@polyhawk6 ай бұрын
Wren's curiosity videos are amazing, he needs his own series for sure!
@rav31026 ай бұрын
ohoho wren blocks out the light on the moon nice detail
@Micwong0252 ай бұрын
The glass, smoke and laser demos were so cool!!! Wren is like the best science teacher we never had in high school
@dolphinous84606 ай бұрын
brilliant video, my favourite kind of Corridor uploads. thank you Wren
@Datdus926 ай бұрын
The gass thing really sounds like a neat idea for planetary defense. Just make it a mirror
@N47Z8614 күн бұрын
Please do more of these; the informative subject matter mixed with CGI visuals is a fresh change to the channel.
@Kaliumcyanidful6 ай бұрын
Two things: above about 200atm pressure the ideal gas law generates errors, so you have to modify the equation. (Real gas eq) Also: a heated thing can only get as hot as the heating Element, for the sun about 5k Celsius. See „What if…“, but i Love the Video 👍😊
@trober2566 ай бұрын
Your best presented explainer yet, Wren- thank you!
@etharion674 ай бұрын
This has officially become my favorite series on this channel. Thanks Wren!
@MysterySteve6 ай бұрын
3:34 Casually makes the coolest thing I've ever seen and wipes it back away for science
@TheLonelyGamer_176 ай бұрын
Underrated comment
@shoppingcart694206 ай бұрын
Very good explanations of refraction in this video!
@ItzSpritz4 ай бұрын
It’s actually spectacular how Wren manages to keep my attention. His speaking is for these types of videos is sooo good
@breadsyoutube6 ай бұрын
Another banger from Wren! This sorta gives me Vsauce "What if the Moon was a Disco Ball?" vibes, but on steroids lol
@MrSquark6 ай бұрын
John Ringo's Troy Rising trilogy uses huge arrays of mirrors in space, focused to make mining lasers (which also double up as weapons against alien invaders)
@chilidawgdawen3 ай бұрын
When I was in middle school, I made a death ray using the exact process you guys did. To see that I was correct on how it would work is CRAZY to me.
@Mente_Fugaz6 ай бұрын
2:51 a villian has born
@defeatSpace6 ай бұрын
10:39 is spoken like a true physicist
@Lol862823 ай бұрын
"its so beautiful" *disappears*
@lawlietriver88696 ай бұрын
Love love love these Wren videos! They are so much fun :D
@ZYT2468Ай бұрын
0:32 poor computer 😭
@paraxysm5 ай бұрын
I love that I learn both about how VFX is done, but also get a physics lesson. Lots of humor too. Keep up the good work guys.
@electricminecrafter6 ай бұрын
2:34 this scene is from the show "star trek enterprise" if anyone was wondering when the xindis attack earth in late season 2 or early 3
@LinusSegueRatings5 ай бұрын
YES I'M NOT THE ONLY ONE
@electricminecrafter5 ай бұрын
@@LinusSegueRatings hot take star trek enterprise season 3 was the best *season* of any star trek ever
@LinusSegueRatings5 ай бұрын
@@electricminecrafter not even a hot take, it was amazing. For me it's a toss up between ENT and DS9
@Maxiroasts5376 ай бұрын
5:34 skip sponsor with this
@g30ffm0rt0n6 ай бұрын
I always love Wren's enthusiasm.
@uselessfest68756 ай бұрын
8:03 Nobody talking bout the portal gun?
@shamon0024 ай бұрын
Underrated comment
@HarnaiDigital6 ай бұрын
The question I’ve never thought of but actually needed to be answered 😅
@vaibhav36garh4 ай бұрын
I wish my teachers were this enthusiastic about science… great job wren
@luzyxl6 ай бұрын
Well now we know what it will feel like when the covenant finally attacks
@themaxfd6 ай бұрын
0:47 This is what happens to Wren when he inhales too much helium.
@EthanIsIt6 ай бұрын
He thinks helium is cocaine
@markoproloscic4492Ай бұрын
Nitpick but at 2:26, the temperature wouldn't increase by 4000 °C every second. You cannot direct sunlight with a lens to heat something up to a higher temperature than the surface of the Sun. You'd be violating the second law of thermodynamics otherwise because you'd be transferring heat from a colder object to a hotter one without spending energy, as the lens is passive. So the temperature would be capped at 5600 °C.
@uncirtyne6 ай бұрын
Due to a thing I learned about yesterday, the Conservation of Etendue might get in the way.
@andrewb95116 ай бұрын
covenant glassing beam ahh moon
@michaelg87192 ай бұрын
Just noticed CC started this ... This honestly brings me back.. i sense Bill Nye vibes and this helps my brain ...