The Coriolis force
Ғылым және технология
Why do objects seem deflected in a carousel? Why do hurricanes turn in opposite directions? And why does a train weigh different depending to its direction? All these answers in 10 minutes!
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Alessandro Roussel,
For more info: www.alessandroroussel.com/en
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To learn more :
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corioli...
Пікірлер: 880
It wouldn't be a ScienceClic video without ending on a black hole
@stdesy
2 жыл бұрын
It wouldn’t be a universe without things ending up at a black hole
@zyansheep
2 жыл бұрын
@@stdesy and then out of the black hole due to hawking radiation (probably)
@Pauluzzs
2 жыл бұрын
@@zyansheep and then in a restart of expansion as spacetime becomes irrelevant due to there only being photons.
@cubing7276
2 жыл бұрын
@@Pauluzzs then by pure luck enough photons meet to generate black hole
@gilbertthered
Жыл бұрын
Was waiting for it
In 10 minutes I understood more about Coriolis force than in a semester of physics! It's amazing what good visual animations can do! How much easier will learning be in a few years from now... Please never stop making these videos! You're saving countless human life hours!
@rexsovelllejes9383
Жыл бұрын
It’s not about understanding but also the calculation.
@Javier-oe9vx
Жыл бұрын
@@rexsovelllejes9383 I guess what @Rainer Wahnsinn means is that some of us , in order to understand we need to first be able to visualize in examples like this before reaching the calculations, or at least in my case will be very hard to assimilate the numbers without understanding the other first. Some other people just needs the numbers and done, and that's ok too.
@sureshvaishampayan7868
Жыл бұрын
I love your vids science click, especially those about quantum mechanics
@scottmerrow7617
Жыл бұрын
kzread.info/dash/bejne/gpqZlLGEe8rJmso.html 1:35 to prove it doesn't exist.
@rocketspushoffair
2 ай бұрын
False! Coriolis might be a thing if spin was the only motion. You must do a vector analysis of all motions, to get the resultant vector of the combined effect of all motions. We can debunk the globe by doing this for just 2 motions: spin + orbit + 21 mm/s/s alternating accel/decel every 12 hours or half revolution, experienced by everything on earth's surface, where is it? Nowhere! A rock balancing statue proves motionless earth. Rigid body rotation with translation is the physics kzread.info/dash/bejne/c5p5xNWnf7vYiJM.html Note the word "rigid" because only solid bodies can spin like a top see flat.wtf [ flatearthclassroom.blogspot.com/2020/11/centrifugal-force-based-on-rotation-axis-of-body.html ] And that's the end of the glob!
I like the editing. When the intro is going the music is chill and relaxing but when the Real deal kicks in, the music becomes mysterious, heavy, Eerie.
@lyan2759
2 жыл бұрын
yes, do you perhaps know the intro music used here?
@sanketvaria9734
2 жыл бұрын
@@lyan2759 nope
@m.d4375
2 жыл бұрын
@@lyan2759 soundcloud.com/aroussel Its the one called "Scienclic" and then "Musique mysterieuse" is the rest of the video.
@aghosh5447
2 жыл бұрын
Nice observations.
@sanketvaria9734
2 жыл бұрын
@@aghosh5447 kind of my job. I'm an animator, game developer, artist, coder, 3D artist, and recently started learning music. So observation is becoming a habit.
For years now I've never really understood the Coriolis force, and just learnt the rules and it's effects to pass tests. This is the first time I've seen it explained in such a clear way, that doesn't dumb it down too much either. Much appreciated.
Imagine a flat earther watching this.
@-guitarhero
Ай бұрын
If the earth is a disk spinning it would still make sense tho
@ValidatingUsername
Ай бұрын
Imagine mistaking the trajectory of a ball in a centrifuge for the coriolis effect 😂
@eMBO_Gaming
Ай бұрын
@@ValidatingUsername Imagine saying that and thinking you know how coriolis works. The cause of that trajectory is literally the coriolis force.
@TellURide447
20 күн бұрын
Imagine imagining the image of imaginary imagery
@detoxvirusuno3397
18 күн бұрын
@@-guitarhero Proves earth is flat and He is khalik and knowledgeable ...😜
This always reminds me of me and my friends throwing ball to each other on a spinning roundabout :D The curved trajectories of ball felt almost like sorcery at the time.
@vincentprime740
2 жыл бұрын
thats literally how basic ballistic theories work lol
@jmckendry84
2 жыл бұрын
@@vincentprime740 and people who play on spinning roundabouts are probably nowhere near old enough to understand basic ballistics, so...
@ispartacus1337
2 жыл бұрын
@@jmckendry84 wtf is a spinning roundabout?
@praveenawesome2182
2 жыл бұрын
Hm
@D_oktor
2 жыл бұрын
@@ispartacus1337 It's like a carousel just... smaller I guess. You know, the thing on playgrounds that spins.
*I am just a student , but I promise when I start earning , I will make a huge donation to this channel* ❤️
@thrash1337
2 жыл бұрын
Study hard and give back to your valuable teachers.
@kimberlyrogers9953
2 жыл бұрын
🥰🥰
@alexiadamasceno1255
2 жыл бұрын
beluga
@antred11
2 жыл бұрын
@@thrash1337 And use your learned skills to do something of value to society.
@samuelromero5786
2 жыл бұрын
That's not how you use bold text
Explained much better than my Geography teacher!
@TeslaElonSpaceXFan
2 жыл бұрын
Ask your physics teacher!
@arvindp551
2 жыл бұрын
@@TeslaElonSpaceXFan Still, this is way better.
@particleonazock2246
2 жыл бұрын
"Geography is just physics slowed down with a couple of trees stuck in it." - Terry Pratchett
@chinmaykrishna6485
2 жыл бұрын
@@TeslaElonSpaceXFan He is much better.
@ss_avsmt
2 жыл бұрын
Geagraphy is to physics what Architecture is to Engineering.
9:10 The black hole animation at the end of this video is beautiful.
Great video
@castagnos509
2 жыл бұрын
Oh dear its flammable maths on scienceclic channel
@whitoan1028
2 жыл бұрын
0o0 papa flammy on science
@ruinenlust_
2 жыл бұрын
g*rman
@keanurevees4250
2 жыл бұрын
😍😍
@maikv750
2 жыл бұрын
@@ruinenlust_ what are you trying to say?
Exceptional visualization. Thanks for the great science content, and congrats on the growth of your channel, it's very deserved.
Would this also mean that dropping the ball in the centrifuge would appear to cause the ball to drift more towards you?
@ScienceClicEN
2 жыл бұрын
Yes exactly!
@whatsup3519
2 жыл бұрын
@@ScienceClicEN Could you please make a video about 1.James Maxwell equation 2. Entropy ( when a ball fall down where can we see disorder?) 3. Quantum physics basic
@vieDOR007
2 жыл бұрын
@@whatsup3519 All what you said is comming (its already out in french, just need translation) and is awesome!
@Saki630
2 жыл бұрын
@@ScienceClicEN Can you show the mathematics? Its nice to see the math from different frames of reference and how they are equivalent and derived from different starting conditions.
@Yora21
2 жыл бұрын
I've seen some old illustrations about how a water fountain shooting water straight up into the air would create strange looking arcs instead of the water coming straight back down. And if you have enough pressure to reach sufficient height, and tilt the direction of the water jet slightly to the side, the water can do a figure eight path before falling back into the pool. The very first episode of The Expanse shows something like that with water coming out of a bottle, though the effect might be shown exaggerated based on the size of the station they are in.
This youtube channel should be mandataroy to watch and to make it a subject for any one on earth. I swear the intelligence levels would rise significantly world wide.
@iSyriux
2 жыл бұрын
Indeed
OMFG, why couldn't that doctor show us this AMAZING VIDEO rather than trying to explain it?! I knew Corriolis effect from past, but never quite understood it to it's fullest.... until now... ;) . Thank you for this! 🧡
I cannot overstate the quality of these videos, it's clear you put a lot of effort to make them so clear yet so detailed. Excellent work!
This is the best explanation I've ever heard of coriollis force
Could you please make a video about 1.James Maxwell equation 2. Entropy ( when a ball fall down where can we see disorder?) 3. Quantum physics basic
@rottenpoet6675
2 жыл бұрын
There are like 10+vids on each subject on different channels
@stdesy
2 жыл бұрын
@@rottenpoet6675 no one does these as well as this channel though
They're back, let's go!
Finally I can say I'm not fat, I'm just moving west.
@gracesteed6574
Жыл бұрын
underrated comment right here
6:25 all my confusions cleared by this. Thankyou for your amezing illustrations.
i really like this channel. the narration and choreography is always on point. thank you for your continued amazing, informative work !
Just about the clearest explanations of complex physics topics are on this channel. Great stuff.
i've watched a bunch of science youtube videos, this channel is imho the most underrated one. the way topics are explained and illustrated is genius. thanks a lot for those videos!
Without question the best explanation of fictitious forces I have ever seen.
The way Octave Masson narrate it is so good to hear that you can understand simply those complex ideas. Plus the animation is very clear and matches the narration which make this video (and all other ScienceClic videos) perfect and unique!
This is by far the best explanation of the Coriolis effect. Visual effects and audio comments make this really clear. A great contribution to increasing our understanding of this beautiful planet.
Only someone who truly understands a subject could create motion graphics that so plainly demonstrate fundamental physics. Although this is a science channel, this is a masterclass in visualization. So much to learn from this channel despite using a “simple” style… bravo!
Clear. Intuitive. Engaging. As always, your content is superb, KZread gold.
That may be the most mind-expanding, eye-opening 10 minutes of video I have ever watched. You literally rocked my whole world and my perceptions of it, in a well thought out and efficient delivery. This is why the internet was invented. Thank you very much.
Please never change this music!!! It's so engaging
I'm amazed that you've made it though the whole video and didn't mention the word geodesics even once. Great job!
Extremely good explanation and such helpful animations - thanks for making this!
This is the best explanation and illustration video of the basics of coriolis and eötvös that I have seen… and I have seen many. Bravo!
Fantastic explanation with amazing graphics!
Great ANALYSIS, to add alongside for future output, corresponding elements connect point to point by measures objects separating time and space.
I remember being introduced to the dynamics of angular momentum in my high school physics class in 1952. The force you describe is a primary force in motorcycle "steering", helicopter flight control, and numerous other applications and dynamic scenarios we encounter in the physical world. You will deal with such forces if you study engineering and take courses like differential equations.
I love your animations. They are most helpful to understand the concepts.
Awesome illustration of the centrifugal force and the Coriolis force. I had never heard of the Eotvos Effect! Very cool!
This is a very good video. You get a great A+ for saying "øtvøsh" effect. This was a very correct pronunciation of the name of the Hungarian physicist Baron Loránd Eötvös.
great explanation, left no place for doubts.
Thank you 😊, you never fail to teach me something new. Now I have to watch this a few more times to fully digest all the material. This was super fun to learn and I was bestowed great knowledge. 👍
Not only did he give me information about corlois force but an overview of other forces and artificial gravity
Best video about the Coreolis force i have seen so far on youtube. Thank you!
That was very interesting. Clear explanation and great narration. Thanks a lot for this video...
Thank you very much. I had a hard time study coiolis force when I was studying classical mechanics. The animations help me understand the concept much better.
His graphics and the way he explained; This the ultimate thing all we wanted, Thanks for these awesome video
That's very amazing to think about!!! Best video ive ever seen to explain centrifugal force.
The Corillis force would be a good way to simply prove that the Earth is a sphere (not quite perfect, but very close to a sphere) and not a disc. You would have to do the experiment with the Folcault pendulum at 3 different locations that are not on a line. In the spherical model, you could use this pendulum to determine the latitude you are standing on. A rigid disc cannot rotate in such a way that the same values as with the sphere would come out.
@nikrodox
2 жыл бұрын
Unfortunately, just like with every other method to prove the earth is round, the people you would aim to show this to (that don’t already agree with it) will find ways to dismiss it. Very cool comment to bring it up though. Thanks for sharing
@stdesy
2 жыл бұрын
@@nikrodox why some people want to believe that flat earth stuff so much is something that is a lot harder to explain than quantum mechanics
@D_oktor
2 жыл бұрын
You are correct, however flat earthers don't care about stuff like this. They always find some bullshit response. You could fly a flat earther into space for him to see the Earth is spherical and he would say that the windows on the ship were actually tv screens. And that's really sad.
@sayarduttabiswas
2 жыл бұрын
Exactly what I was thinking as well. But to comprehend even simple physics we need brain slightly larger than a pea which is not the case for the group you are talking about!
@AverageAlien
2 жыл бұрын
there are millions of other ways to tell that the earth is a sphere
Very nice and instructive video. Many thanks.
In school we always got "yeah it's more complicated than that actually" but never this clear of an explanation. Thank you!
What we feel as the force of gravity is a something of a Coriolis effect. It derives from the conservation of all objects' constant velocity thru spacetime, and the way mass slows time with increased proximity to the center of mass. The upper part of an object, farther from a nearby mass than the lower part, and so moving thru time faster than the lower, is "pushed" toward the lower part, causing what seems to be motion toward the center of the nearby mass, in much the same way that a projectile aimed toward the pole of a planet seems to trace a curved path.
@alepunto7404
2 жыл бұрын
Shouldn´t the shape of objects affect the force of gravity then?
@orbismworldbuilding8428
2 жыл бұрын
@@alepunto7404 i know that the shape of an object can effect it's center of mass and hiw gravity seems to act on it, but i think it'd probably be something more like a 4d shape made of spacetime? Idk don't quote me on that
@alepunto7404
2 жыл бұрын
@@orbismworldbuilding8428 Yes, you are right, it´s better to think in 4D. I guessed that shape could affect gravity because a stick perpendicular to earth would have greater time dilation differential between both ends of the stick than a stick parallel to earth, hence the perpendicular stick should feel more gravity. But I was thinking in 3D. I guess that taking in consideration time as another dimension of the object, the bottom of the object with slower "time speed" its going to slow down the upper part of the object with higher "time speed". And decreasing the "time speed" of the whole object, increases the "space speed", causing the object to start moving towards the earth.
@vincentprime740
2 жыл бұрын
we arent in a constant motion u know, the only motion in space is free falling.
@stuart6478
4 ай бұрын
No, you do not get a prize for this nonsense. Nobody knows what gravity is, they just measure it
Cool stuff! I was writing a story where in one of the scenes, astronauts are travelling in an elevator up the shaft of a massive centrifuge very rapidly. I imagined the Coriolis effect would manifest and ended up making the astronauts feel a push in the opposite direction of the centrifuge's rotation (if the astronauts didn't hold on to anything, they would tilt sideways as the elevator ascended). It's a bit more exaggerated than it would be in real life but I imagined that was what would happen in such a scenario.
Every ScienceClic video is a great video
Extremely well done. Thank you!
Wow! Now that’s an explainer video ! Brilliant job
Awesome video as always!
What a brilliant explanation!
This channel is amazing! Simple and clear
That was amazing. Well done.
I love this channel, makes me want to study Physics.
This is the best science video I've seen in months, maybe years.
The animations on this channel are always so useful
Why is it KZread videos do SO MUCH BETTER explaining things we learned in school than the teachers that taught us? And much faster! I can take a test right after this video and probably get an 85 maybe and be able to retract it to a friend if need be. Next topic! But when taught in school, this one topic could take a few days or a week. I feel as if I’m not understanding it all still and probably get a C+ if lucky taking a test. Retained nothing and not able to explain it back to anyone to save my life! KZread and channels like this were game changers for learning especially if you’re mainly a visual learner.
Truly a great channel!
Amazing visualization, thanks a lot!
Wow the visual really makes a difference, these frames of reference were always hard for me to get, but now it's easier! Thank you 😁
Comming from your first chanel, ScienceClic (fr), i love your videos for a long time (maybe 3 years). I hope you ll succed faster in english! You should release your video about the EM fields and waves next (my favorite). Thanks for all your work
that music is just so perfect... xD Watching these videos is so relaxing and interesting
5:50 actually happened. The Paris Cannon of 1918 had to aim up to two miles from targets to hit them because of its extreme range.
Great Quality. Great theme. Great Channel.
welcome back to Science Clic... love your vid.
This is one of those videos when two-and-a-half minutes into it you go oh I get it now it makes so much perfect sense, thank you so much for this video and by the way you are so awesome thank you for using this music which I love so much!!!
Your talent of explaining is out of this world for me . This Channel is 🎁 👍
The 'eotvos effect' is so cool!
Thanks. I just found out there is a good channel like this. Easy to understand. Auto subscribe.
I've just discovered this channel and I'm already mesmerised and addicted to it ❤
Excellent! Thank you!
this was an emotional eye-opening experience. science is amazing.
Great video. Best I have gone through. Thanks
Nice video, never understood this before today!
Great combo 👍🏻
Awesome explanations
Frame of reference seems so easy to explain but it's not intuitive because it is outside our personal experience.
Totally superb video. Best explanation I have seen.
Thank you for nice explanation
complex topic, but pleasantly and clearly explained. I am already a subscriber, I like and I share!👍❤️
When I saw the notification I was very much excited. But when I watched the video.I was amazed by physics once again. Thank you sir🙏🙏
Very clear explanation! Bonus points for pronouncing Eötvös correctly.
Honestly keep making video's. One day this channel will explode. These video's are just too good! I usually don't sub to anything but for this i'll make an exception! I think you really deserve it brother
Thanks, this was very clear and helpful.
Fascinating video
great video!!! As an uni student that didnt undertood it at the moment, this was very informative!!!
Great explanation, the conservation of motion and inertia made it click for me. What an educational KZread rabbit trail :)
thanks for new video! my favorite channel!!!
Man! I love this channel
Wonderful ! Thank you ❤️
Thanx for such a amzing video it cleared of all doubts of coriolis ❤️ I was struggling with coriolis for two months . Thanx again
Really good explanation
Thank you, Sir! It really helped...
slowly please, my neurons are flatearthers