How Wrong Is VERITASIUM? A Lamp and Power Line Story

2024 ж. 26 Сәу.
3 336 429 Рет қаралды

Veritasium’s electronic question disturbed the nation! But was he wrong?
Visit audible.com/electroboom or in US text electroboom to 500-500 and give yourself the gift of listening.
The references in the video:
Veritasium’s video: • The Big Misconception ...
Science Asylum’s Video: • Circuit Energy doesn't...
Professors’ Line Analysis: ve42.co/bigcircuit
EEVBLOG’s Channel: kzhead.info...
NEW MERCH!!!: electroboom.creator-spring.co...
Thanks for your support @ / electroboom
Checkout my merch: teespring.com/stores/electroboom
Post your submissions to: / electroboom
My Facebook: / electroboom
My Twitter: / electroboomguy
My other articles: www.electroboom.com/
Thanks to CircuitSpecialists.com and keysight.com for proving my essential lab tools and giveaways.
Checkout my Amazon picks (my affiliate link): www.amazon.com/shop/Electroboom
Below are my Super Patrons with support to the extreme!
Nicholas Moller at www.usbmemorydirect.com
Sam Lutfi
Peter Membrey
William Spain
Enter your school for tools: goo.gl/forms/VAgRre8rLVvA1cEi2
My sponsors and top patrons: www.electroboom.com/?page_id=727
By: Mehdi Sadaghdar
0:00 Veritasium’s question and answer, was he right?
3:51 Short review of Derek’s video
5:24 Poynting Vector, direction of power flow
9:05 Detailed analysis of Derek’s question, Transmission Lines
17:37 WATCH THIS PART!
Local Forecast - Slower by Kevin MacLeod
Link: incompetech.filmmusic.io/song...
License: creativecommons.org/licenses/...

Пікірлер
  • Thank you for making this video! While in hindsight I can clearly see that I should have gone into more detail with the explanation, I have really enjoyed watching all the response videos. For the record I was not suggesting the lightbulb lights at ANY current value but at some small but significant current value. I tested my LED bulb rated for 12V and found it turns on dimly when I apply 2V. There may yet be a follow up video coming. So thank you for this commentary - I'll incorporate it into any further work I do on this topic.

    @veritasium@veritasium2 жыл бұрын
    • There he is

      @kelvinclovis6562@kelvinclovis65622 жыл бұрын
    • Alright I guess I'll look forward to the follow up video.

      @DragonVisionGT@DragonVisionGT2 жыл бұрын
    • It's so nice to see civil and intellectual discussions between my favourite youtubers!!

      @saranshgautam6551@saranshgautam65512 жыл бұрын
    • isn't any current that turns the bulb on "significant"? ;) also i doubt that'll change the fact your wires aren't magic warp machines. as soon as your current is significant enough as to not have the lamp on all the time due to background noise, your EM coupling between the "half-loops" won't suffice, while the transmission along the loops will take its time.

      @nonchip@nonchip2 жыл бұрын
    • You guys all do great work! Thanks Veritasium, ElectroBOOM, and EEVblog. I enjoy all y'alls videos.

      @RichardBrightwell@RichardBrightwell2 жыл бұрын
  • Thanks for the shout-out, Mehdi! This was a thorough and nuanced response to Derek's video. It's important to remember that, while the energy _is_ transferred by the fields, the current is still in control. The lightbulb isn't going to do _anything_ if there isn't a current through it. During a recent live Q&A (for supporters only), I talked about Derek's question a little. My guess was that a real-life bulb wouldn't immediately turn on, but would slowly/gradually brighten over a few seconds. It sounds like you agree, which is validating.

    @ScienceAsylum@ScienceAsylum2 жыл бұрын
    • Hey.... I love your videos.

      @harikishore2514@harikishore25142 жыл бұрын
    • Cool

      @orangeman_2125@orangeman_21252 жыл бұрын
    • The funny thing is that with 10m of distance, you already have a super small current from the capacitance alone. The only correct answer, the lamp is already on, so its 0s , not matter if you close the switch or not. Oh the leak current, about about the leak current... That was my conclusion while I watched the video, baffled. Doesn't electric fields technically go to infinity ? even thou they decrease with the square of the distance ? All lamps are always on by veritassium definition.

      @monad_tcp@monad_tcp2 жыл бұрын
    • Another thing that irritates is that it was never defined what is a "turned on lamp", one would presume it would emit enough lumens, but how much ? What are you ideas on this ?

      @monad_tcp@monad_tcp2 жыл бұрын
    • Hay a wild crazy is here

      @EwingTaiwan@EwingTaiwan2 жыл бұрын
  • It doesn't happen very often, but sometimes I am hit with a strong sense of "man, this guy really knows what he's talking about"', thanks Mehdi

    @cryhavocandletslipthedogso1873@cryhavocandletslipthedogso187310 ай бұрын
    • But he’s wrong.

      @jpsienicki@jpsienicki8 ай бұрын
    • Sometimes it might seem like person knows what he's talking but they're bullshitting you. Not in this case, Mehdi is actually right but others might be wrong. Like Veritasium who seems like he knows what he's talking about but he's been straight up wrong few times

      @realdragon@realdragon6 ай бұрын
    • @@realdragon I heartily agree, but of course there is a difference between talking out of your ass and making an honest mistake. Considering Veritasium's sportsmanlike acknowledgement that his brevity sacrificed precision, he doesn't seem like a bullshitter to me - though I am not familiar with his content beyond this reply

      @cryhavocandletslipthedogso1873@cryhavocandletslipthedogso18736 ай бұрын
    • @@cryhavocandletslipthedogso1873 He might not be bullshitting on purpose but he has wide audience and that audience who doesn't know any better believes him. He also made video of why water running water bends when you put electrically charged object near it and he wasn't just mistaken, everything he said was straight up wrong and it's easy to prove too

      @realdragon@realdragon6 ай бұрын
    • @@realdragon Alright then, thanks for letting the world know

      @cryhavocandletslipthedogso1873@cryhavocandletslipthedogso18736 ай бұрын
  • I've begun my journey into electrical engineering as a hobby thanks to creators like you. I began watching because you were purely entertaining, and now I'm accumulating tools and measuring current and actually sat down and measured hundreds of resistors the other day and was actually excited as I thought about how it all works. I'm slowly beginning to understand more and more about how electrons move and how various components can manipulate them into doing all kinds of cool stuff. This video helped me better understand that movement. Thanks for making such great videos!

    @onstr@onstr2 жыл бұрын
    • You should study electrical engineering, too much fun.

      @striderlotr4705@striderlotr4705 Жыл бұрын
    • @@striderlotr4705 hmmm I've heard the opposite lol

      @n.cooper9758@n.cooper97583 ай бұрын
    • Uhhh... as a *_hobby_* ?? 😢

      @Heyu7her3@Heyu7her33 ай бұрын
    • read the Thomas Floyd book

      @mariconm@mariconm2 ай бұрын
  • Comprehensive and briliant. Derek deserved this :-P

    @EEVblog@EEVblog2 жыл бұрын
    • I love that you, electroboom, bigclive and other electrical channels have something to say about this. It's very interesting and I don't actually believe everything he said although I know I'm far naive. I loved electricity ever since I existed but I still have no complete understanding of it. Still, thank you electrical community! Kind of funny he predicted that it he would be called out but turned out he was called out because of the simple answer itself. I'm just waiting for Derek's reaction to this. He seem to be very sensational in his videos and inaccurate.

      @omniyambot9876@omniyambot98762 жыл бұрын
    • sadly we will never know anymore which video is actually right since youtube removed dislikes lol

      @HucaPuca@HucaPuca2 жыл бұрын
    • SCHOOL! The answer is I don't go! Why go? I am famous. I am famous. I have more fans than fingers multiplied with toes multiplied with teeth multiplied with ears. I am famous. I am famous. SCHOOL? No, thanks. KZhead FAME? Yes. Good day, dear eev

      @AxxLAfriku@AxxLAfriku2 жыл бұрын
    • Hi, can any of you please explain this in terms of high school physics? What we have learnt is that current travels through two methods - conduction and induction. What I understood from Derek's video was that he was claiming that the bulb would turn on simply by induction field from the battery. The conduction field as I understand travels through the entire length of wire before hitting the bulb. And the induction field would be too weak to turn on the bulb. Kindly elaborate on this. Also, I saw a video where the person said that if he places the switch near moon, as soon as he closes it, then by Derek's theory, it would turn on in 1/c seconds. So by turning the switch on and off, he could essentially send a Morse code message from a distance of c metres which Derek can receive in 1/c seconds, esentially violating that no information can be sent faster than c theory. It would be very kind if you could explain that as well.

      @adt007ad@adt007ad2 жыл бұрын
    • @@AxxLAfriku fariday and other pioneers of Elektro wasn’t exactly brilliant at school

      @ingenfestbrems@ingenfestbrems2 жыл бұрын
  • I am truly amazed that how KZhead science community holds arguments. Like a true gentleman, Mehdi.

    @yumnjame546@yumnjame5462 жыл бұрын
    • If I had a coin for every time Mehdi argued with a science KZheadr...

      @sasdagreat8052@sasdagreat80522 жыл бұрын
    • yeah it's really nice

      @arn3107@arn31072 жыл бұрын
    • The science part of KZhead is one of it's best parts. Most of KZhead is is either cancer or garbage.

      @Shinkajo@Shinkajo2 жыл бұрын
    • @@sasdagreat8052 You'd have atleast three

      @mihirmutalikdesai@mihirmutalikdesai2 жыл бұрын
    • @@sasdagreat8052 If I had ten thousand Canadian coins for every time...

      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721@vigilantcosmicpenguin87212 жыл бұрын
  • What made me laugh most is I instantly picked up on the fallacy of Derek's idea that the chain in the pipe was a poor analogy when I saw his video. I tried to imagine an engine that would work with such movement, but got bored trying to figure something out. The simplicity of a saw cutting through wood was like a smack across the face.

    @matthewedwards9423@matthewedwards94234 ай бұрын
    • did you see the second video of veritasium?

      @elmervelazquez3549@elmervelazquez35493 ай бұрын
  • Great video - one of the best ElectroBoom made so far - balancing his critical and humorous views with a nice technical information. A pleasure to watch, as always, even more informative and educative than most. Thank you!

    @EJEuth@EJEuth2 жыл бұрын
  • Thought to mention, even the 1 second round trip delay is not fully accurate as the LC circuit imposes its own propagation delay on top of light speed. Like I said the current flattens out traveling through the network and that slows down voltage step transitions, as you also see in the simulations at the end of video. Sorry, too much technical details!!

    @ElectroBOOM@ElectroBOOM2 жыл бұрын
    • hello boom man

      @ancientdew210@ancientdew2102 жыл бұрын
    • Is there any way to actually measure how much current would actually transmit over 1/c s to the bulb. Im just curious.

      @iamawsome0123@iamawsome01232 жыл бұрын
    • Electroboom come to goa and plz gave me multimeter plz

      @sangeetramaya@sangeetramaya2 жыл бұрын
    • Have you seen this video? kzhead.info/sun/f9SYkpyfiKKuinA/bejne.html

      @johnyang799@johnyang7992 жыл бұрын
    • This kind of debates are far better than the boring online classes. Thanks Mehdi. ⚡💯

      @thef1club@thef1club2 жыл бұрын
  • The Veritasium video feels analogous to saying "In a hydraulic system It's the pressure waves which transmit force, not the water molecules" which is technically true but you can't have water pressure without, you know, the water molecules. Granted a hydraulic system is far less complicated than an electrical one (there's no induction for one) but I still feel that is a fair comparison.

    @CookieQuantum@CookieQuantum2 жыл бұрын
    • The most important difference being that water molecules*, unlike charges, can’t act on each other at a distance at relativistic speeds. I think it’s a fair comparison, and it poynts to a potential issue with Derek’s interpretation. He acts as if the EM-field is the be-all and end-all of electricity. When it’s the charges and their acceleration and velocity that defines the EM-field in the first place. * Water might not be the best example when I think about it, as it's a polar molecule.

      @Triszious@Triszious2 жыл бұрын
    • Exactly. Nice analogy

      @tomg0@tomg02 жыл бұрын
    • @@Triszious I mean the water molecules kinda do still have those electrical properties. Electrostatics mean when we think about the water molecules colliding they don't actually collide they bounce off each other's charges ;-) so you're more right if you wanted to get silly about it (like the veritasium video)

      @zyeborm@zyeborm2 жыл бұрын
    • Could you think of the size of the pipe with water running at a certain speed carrying some momentum as analogous to induction? The water hammer effect seems to be very similar to the flyback voltage spikes.

      @estebon@estebon2 жыл бұрын
    • It's the current that gets you, not the voltage 🤣😉

      @TheAnzamin@TheAnzamin2 жыл бұрын
  • I always love it when you make response videos. I always down I'm gonna get a more detailed commentary of information! Love it!

    @DRuddful@DRuddful2 жыл бұрын
  • I remember an experiment I did during my masters thesis. I was attempting to make a lidar based on Time of Flight and had acquired a chip (which I don't know the name of right now) that could measure time extremely precisely (we're talking down to sub 100 ps). I had a microcontroller generating a start and a stop pulse (at some frequency I don't remember, but it was on the order of magnitude of 1Hz), then I measured the difference between the propagation time of the signals. I don't remember exactly what the input into the timer IC looked like, but I assume it's some sort of MOSFET gate. Anyway, I tried with different lengths of wire and could indeed measure the lengths with the propagation time (cool!). I also happened to have a 100m roll of wire I just bought, so I tried connecting it to see if they really did provide me with the correct length. I was very surprised when the propagation time was way less than what would be expected from that 100m wire. My thoughts was that either I found a waay to send information faster than light and should clearly be awarded with a Nobel Prize... or that there was some other effect I didn't fully understand. Most likely this was some combination of infuctance and capacitance in the wire (since it was basically a coil). We could also change the propagation time by moving our hands closer to the wire coil. So yeah, Veritasium is right that currents don't flow ONLY in wires, but the matter is more complex. Thanks for the good explanation, Mehdi!

    @sternis1@sternis12 жыл бұрын
    • > currents don't flow ONLY in wires Currents *do* only flow in wires. It's the "voltages" that can span matter / space, and induce currents in other parts of the circuit.

      @SDX2000@SDX20002 жыл бұрын
    • If it’s not too much trouble, what chip did you use? I was wanting to make a TOF lidar range finder but I couldn’t find any MCUs with fast enough timers

      @elsnowman123@elsnowman1232 жыл бұрын
    • That's because many people fail to fundamentally understand their electricity and magnetism classes. Induced current is just as important (and dangerous to screw up) as the direct path current. There is a reason if you take electricity and magnetism, signal analysis, and signal transmission, you will hate the designs from most engineers.

      @bransonwalter5588@bransonwalter55882 жыл бұрын
    • @@SDX2000 it is the EMF. To quote my college electronics teacher, "in relation to what" is the most important aspect to voltages. Voltage is a massive simplification of the complex effect of EMF.

      @bransonwalter5588@bransonwalter55882 жыл бұрын
    • @@bransonwalter5588 EMF is also a voltage. There is no need to special case it for a discussion on induced current.

      @SDX2000@SDX20002 жыл бұрын
  • Finally an engineer that combines both the engineering and physic models without outright dismissing one or the other. A very insightful video that perfectly complements Derek’s video and add some much needed realism to it. If I could subscribe twice I would!

    @darkphotons101@darkphotons1012 жыл бұрын
    • Use another acc

      @controversialcoffe5709@controversialcoffe57092 жыл бұрын
    • @Idiosarchy I think the video is still complementary because it's a thought experiment designed to emphasize a specific mechanism of electricity at the exclusion of all others. Maybe he could have been more thorough with his hypothetical situation, but I don't think it's fair to say it's wrong or misleading. If it was meant to be purely realistic he wouldn't have said the wires have zero resistance or that the lightbulb would turn on at any amount of current. I guess he did sensationalize it with his choice of words, but it's KZhead, of course he did. Is this channel any different in that regard?

      @biologicallyawptimized@biologicallyawptimized2 жыл бұрын
    • @Idiosarchy The basic concept is not wrong. It really will take only 1/c seconds for a change in current to start happening through the light bulb. Derek's thought experiment has some flaws (he could have been more detailed and specific). Just like Medhi's thought experiment has some flaws (which he points out). No thought experiment is perfect, but it doesn't need to be in order to communicate the basic concept. The basic concept is 100% correct.

      @tylerdurden3722@tylerdurden37222 жыл бұрын
    • You do realize that Physics has branches and that those branches also have branches? Physics is like the tree with, for example, the branch Circuit Analysis. You can also split your Classical Mechanics into Statics and Dynamics. You can split your Fluid Mechanics into say Fluid Dynamics. Don’t even get me started with Metaphysics. Good times, haha 😂.

      @Oscar-jg9gg@Oscar-jg9gg2 жыл бұрын
    • @Idiosarchy the argument obviously has flaws, I never denied that. My point is that he hilights a physical phenomenon that we can understand even if the thought experiment is imperfect. At this point we are just splitting hairs even though I think we both understand the point and intent of the message. I'd like to point out that Schrodinger's cat also probably would not actually work in real life but emphasizes the strangeness of quantum mechanics in a way that is digestible to the lay person. The point is to isolate variables, not to turn sci-fi into reality

      @biologicallyawptimized@biologicallyawptimized2 жыл бұрын
  • With regards to the “lies” point, I’m reminded of something my engineering professors at university would sometimes say. All models of the world and its behaviour are wrong, but some of them are still useful.

    @gavinli1368@gavinli13682 жыл бұрын
    • Perhaps, in many cases, "incomplete" may be more accurate than "wrong".

      @heronimousbrapson863@heronimousbrapson8632 жыл бұрын
    • A model are accurate to a certain scale, then at another scale a different model will explain things better. eg: the Newtonian gravity is accurate at low gravity condition but not at high-gravity, while Einstein spacetime curvature is accurate at high-gravity condition. A model is functional at specific scale & conditions and it is against our common sense to even call the Newtonian gravity "wrong" just because there exist a different explanation like spacetime curvature.

      @xponen@xponen2 жыл бұрын
    • ie. Almost all but the most detailed fluid dynamics relations. Several of the are true, but exist in simplifications that cannot exist irl. or they are simplifications that intentionally get something wrong, because the question is impossible to solve otherwise. Still the best solution we have, wherever dimensional analysis and models aren't feasible.

      @faithnfire4769@faithnfire47692 жыл бұрын
    • I took it as "lies" we tell children so we could help explain better a concept without needing for the kid to do a psychics/engineering course so they can grasp at it.

      @l4nd3r@l4nd3r2 жыл бұрын
    • I'm an Electronics proffesor in a Mexican university and I agree, since I myself have used this quote. Though, in Spanish...

      @alejandroaguirre3809@alejandroaguirre38092 жыл бұрын
  • This is a perfect example of the value and importance of readily accessible rebuttals to all content online. Rebuttals add value to the discussion and people are better off when they get critical responses from other people who add nuance and further context to issues. We need 'The Socratic Web'...

    @shanegreenup5555@shanegreenup55552 жыл бұрын
  • Thanks. A. Million! At 13:05 into the video I suddenly fully understood coaxial cable impedance! You know; 75 or 50 ohms normally. Just great! 😁

    @Poult100@Poult100 Жыл бұрын
  • Dude, that whiteboard action was impressive, well done!

    @avi8r66@avi8r662 жыл бұрын
    • new editing skill acquired

      @pistonsjem@pistonsjem2 жыл бұрын
    • Lmao came here for this

      @MrHichammohsen1@MrHichammohsen12 жыл бұрын
    • Yeah, I didn't realize he had magical whiteboard powers that can edit a whiteboard without touching it!

      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721@vigilantcosmicpenguin87212 жыл бұрын
  • I just realized, these videos are the equivalent of scientists/mathematicians dueling during the olden times. Back then they used letters to communicate with each other, trying to question/disprove the other's claims, or battle it out in a good old duel. Now we are seeing it happen but 21st century style!

    @CrappycrapCrappy@CrappycrapCrappy2 жыл бұрын
    • yeah lets prepare some popcorn

      @geomorillo@geomorillo2 жыл бұрын
    • Great inventions ahead.

      @shis10@shis102 жыл бұрын
    • great insight! ps. I'v been calling them "nerd feuds" & I love them.

      @mtraven23@mtraven232 жыл бұрын
    • This is more like scientists versus engineers 🤪

      @chrisbanbury@chrisbanbury2 жыл бұрын
    • Unfortunately none here are career scientist. They are KZheadrs

      @falconeagle3655@falconeagle36552 жыл бұрын
  • loved watching this , so glad I found it. Great video, knowledgeable, and entertaining. Great job!

    @DeborahSpriggs1980@DeborahSpriggs19802 жыл бұрын
  • Thank you for your analysis. I find your argument compelling. Conceptually modeling the power line as a transmission line of linked inductors and capacitors is genius! Well done! I guess I can now cancel my order for 1 light-year of 16 gauge copper wire from Amazon. They were estimating 16,000 years to fulfill the order anyway!

    @TyMoore95503@TyMoore955032 жыл бұрын
  • This was the exact reaction I got from my father who is an electrical engineer. The point of the video was really just to show that energy doesn't just flow like water in a pipe, but the question posed in the beginning really was quite a misleading

    @Dhananjai284@Dhananjai2842 жыл бұрын
    • Funny thing is - you can transfer same "energy" in a pipe as a fast cold water flow OR with a signlificantly slower flow of hot water. And the slow but hot water will actually radiate the energy similarly to a magnetic field

      @iteratortv@iteratortv2 жыл бұрын
    • Misleading to say the least. I really really like how medy brought in an even more interesting and crazier answer with leakage current. This video was awesome. I am also in EE. and i was also very very triggered by Derek. I agree with Medy!!

      @MartinME3@MartinME32 жыл бұрын
    • Indeed. As an educational video, Derek did a really bad job. Actually causing more confusion and misunderstanding. Giving people the impression that ALL electric energy flows straight through the air. When in fact the vast majority of the energy flows inside the wire, or very close to the wire. Only a tiny fraction of the energy flows through the air any meaningful distance from the wire.

      @vonnikon@vonnikon2 жыл бұрын
    • Viewing EM fields from the perspective of energy carried is just straight-up confusing to people, who don't understand where the concept of energy even comes from And these people are the vast majority

      @blinded6502@blinded65022 жыл бұрын
    • "Energy", the physics term, and energy as it's commonly defined are two separate concepts. "Energy" in physics lacks physicality. You can't point to energy, and it is reference dependent. That's the whole issue with Derek's question. "Energy" doesn't exist, it's a description of emergent properties within a system.

      @NefariousDestiny@NefariousDestiny2 жыл бұрын
  • Since youtube removed dislike count, the like/dislike ratio so far is 98.8% if anyone cares

    @ElectroBOOM@ElectroBOOM2 жыл бұрын
    • Let's use this ^^ comment's like button as the dislike button.

      @nicolaimanev@nicolaimanev2 жыл бұрын
    • I care. And keep us updated about it.

      @sufiyanadam@sufiyanadam2 жыл бұрын
    • Can add 'Return KZhead Dislike' extension to chrome for now. There needs to be a petition.

      @85NP85@85NP852 жыл бұрын
    • @@85NP85 , assuming that KZhead actually gives a shit(which they clearly don't).

      @nickstanley5064@nickstanley50642 жыл бұрын
    • Not all heroes wear capes!

      @dkexpat2755@dkexpat27552 жыл бұрын
  • As a complete layman and after seeing Veritasium's second video I think I finally understood the issue. You both came to the same conclusion, except that Mehdi clarified how the details of this thought experiment were important. Derek's description of electric fields is true but it is presented as if the fully complete circuit is inconsequential. It is important that the completed circuit wires guide the electric field in order to have a light bulb fully light up, which takes a year for a lightyear-long wire. The "disconnected" parallel wires which are 1 meter apart will cause an "immediate" (1/C sec) voltage increase in the light bulb when it is connected to power, because a small amount of energy is transmitted across the 1 meter gap. However, whether the light actually turns on from this depends on the required voltage (e.g. an LED requires less than an incandescent bulb) which in the case of an LED will only dimly light up and you have to wait for the energy to be transmitted across the complete circuit before it fully lights up. Therefore, no laws of physics were broken because none of the energy was transmitted faster than the speed of light, so our conventional abstraction of how electricity "flows" still illustrates the important parts of how electricity behaves, even if it's not a complete picture. The impression I got from the first Veritasium video was that this model is completely flawed. Did I get all that right?

    @SagBobet@SagBobet2 жыл бұрын
    • Nice 👍

      @trevorhall2832@trevorhall28322 жыл бұрын
    • So in Derek's experiment the distance between the lines was set at 1 meter. What would happen is the entire 300k kilometers of wire was laid out in a perfect circle. Hmmm....

      @BillAnt@BillAnt Жыл бұрын
    • @@BillAnt It would take the circle's diameter/c to get that first small bit of current, then it would take the circle's circumference/c to get the full voltage.

      @nikkiofthevalley@nikkiofthevalley Жыл бұрын
    • That sounds sound!

      @josephstratti52@josephstratti52 Жыл бұрын
    • Thats exactly what I understood and I think Mehdi also shows the same concept in his follow up video

      @theinterruptedlife1783@theinterruptedlife1783 Жыл бұрын
  • This actually reminds me of the days when I was twisting my head around RF circuits :D All of this is known and I really appreciate you pointing out the workable models to think about this.

    @jannepeltonen2036@jannepeltonen2036 Жыл бұрын
  • Well done. His conflicting statements drove me nuts as well.

    @FilamentFriday@FilamentFriday2 жыл бұрын
    • Derek suddenly unites Electrical and 3d Printing worlds on youtube eh.

      @ErickeGallardo@ErickeGallardo2 жыл бұрын
    • The biggest mistake in that video is him saying schools LIED to us. If schools teach something that seems wrong, that's because it is oversimplified for us as young students to understand. That is not LYING. Derek is an educator and his role is to clear up the misconceptions. Leave the lies to conspiracy theorists.

      @FootLettuce@FootLettuce2 жыл бұрын
    • without you my 3dprinter would still drive me nuts

      @whothis8933@whothis89332 жыл бұрын
    • yooo it’s chuck hiii

      @94flow93@94flow932 жыл бұрын
    • @@FootLettuce I saw a Kurzgesagt video earlier that used the word "lied" in the exact same sense (that oversimplification is lying), and I thought that was unnecessarily clickbaity for the same reasons.

      @xdavid00@xdavid002 жыл бұрын
  • What really bugs me is that Derek calls other models "Lies".. i think that violates a very important principle of science, that all models that are supported by experiment are equally correct. It's like calling one of the many theories of quantum mechanics "lies".. it's just a different way of thinking about the same phenomenon

    @aL3891_@aL3891_2 жыл бұрын
    • And Kurgesat just did a video about the "lies" they tell yesterday. Its much too strong of a word for something like this.

      @nitehawk86@nitehawk862 жыл бұрын
    • I like that Derek made a video that fed the KZhead educational video ecosystem with conversation points and content for interesting videos

      @Thisisahandle701@Thisisahandle7012 жыл бұрын
    • 100% agreed, veritasium really annoys me hes become the epitome of pop science when he used to make pretty good videos. I know hes just playing to the algorithm but i feel like his style makes you loose so much nuance.

      @nope110@nope1102 жыл бұрын
    • @@Thisisahandle701 No. Derek does not get credit for making a bullshit video that happened to lead to good discussions when other more responsible and knowledgeable people had to correct and clean up his mess.

      @sledzeppelin@sledzeppelin2 жыл бұрын
    • Well, he's been taking lots of notes from Mr Beast's notebook for the last couple of years, so obviously feeding the algorithm first and the conversation second was in the cards

      @vanerek@vanerek2 жыл бұрын
  • This is one of the best videos I have watched in a very long time. As an engineer, I think, this is exactly "how" and "what" we need to teach upcoming engineers. Very well done. You have a subscriber. Thank you and keep it up.

    @SusheelRaut@SusheelRaut10 ай бұрын
    • isnt that unrealistic? this guy probably has a phd... and he is barely learning this after thinking about it for days😅

      @heberildo@heberildo8 ай бұрын
  • This has got to be my most favorite and oldest channel I've watched on YT, and you just keep getting better.

    @sprockkets@sprockkets2 жыл бұрын
  • I have to say this: Derek video did not convince me at all. No matter what everybody else was saying. Your video cleared everything and comprehensively. For this kind of problem it is not possible to disregard transmission lines theory or not defining the voltage threshold at which the lamp would turn on. Well done!

    @eleneasy@eleneasy2 жыл бұрын
    • I was very distraught when I saw it first. After multiple viewings and seeing a lot or reactions to it, when I finally figured he was simply taking about the original capacitive transmission between the lines I felt better, but I was still not feeling great about it. EEVblog's video helped a lot. And now Mehdi's video explained it succinctly. I feel it wasn't derek's proudest moment. He made a lot of simplifications in order to make it sound shocking and counter intuitive. I think he could have done a better job with it.

      @stathisbikos6563@stathisbikos65632 жыл бұрын
    • yes his vid is really good..And now i will burn your brain: Actually if you are sawing wood,the energy isnt transmitted directly by the saw itselve (not as you would see it macroscopically),but also by electromagnezic waves. Why you ask? Because the saws material is made of atoms not even touching each other, but having a certain distance. So the force cant even be transmitted by them, as you might think. The force is transmitted by the electric attraction of the protons to the electrons, plus the repulsion of two protons plus the repulsion of two electrons. So also the energy is transmitted by electric fields. Also due to little inner movements theres also a very very very tiny magnetic field+electric field created (similar to that in a crystal inside a lighter, bur way weaker) which also propegates outside of the saw,and this will also bring the energy to the wood. I hope your head isnt smoking right now.

      @neutronenstern.@neutronenstern.2 жыл бұрын
    • i thought im the only one. thanks

      @geminischweiz@geminischweiz2 жыл бұрын
    • Totally agree with you. This and the suggestive way the video was presented by Derek really doesn't do the whole topic justice. It's a complicated topic and disregarding everything that has been taught as »lies« is just exaggerated. Also, Derek never actually said why it was supposed to be 1 / c and that the 1 in the numerator comes from the distance of 1 meter of the lamp and battery. It was really posed as a trick question because the actual background of 1 / c was never fully explained. In just the plain words as said by Derek, the units of 1 / c wouldn't add up, because it would be seconds per meter. Only if you bring in the 1 meter of distance, it starts to make sense again in the context of Derek's video.

      @ReyMysterioX@ReyMysterioX2 жыл бұрын
    • The Veritasium's video was intentionally ambigous to spark reactions (free marketing) and views. Moving on

      @hlavaatch@hlavaatch2 жыл бұрын
  • I am the Abbott you mentioned in your video. I did the initial simulations and built a scale model for verification. I loved your explanation and gained a lot more insight from the clear way you explained it. I think Derek did a great job of getting people thinking about all this, and I'm delighted you are the one who actually took the time to verify my result as I didn't think anyone looked at it! Thanks again, I just subscribed to your channel.

    @rsa4510@rsa45102 жыл бұрын
    • So good reaction:))

      @schetnikov@schetnikov2 жыл бұрын
    • What took you so long? Go subscribe to Applied Science if you haven't already.

      @johndaniels972@johndaniels9722 жыл бұрын
    • Great analysis Dr. Abbott

      @fireboltthegod@fireboltthegod2 жыл бұрын
    • Poynting theorem states that closed surface integral of E×H = rate of decrese of energy stored by electric field and magnetic field in the volume of closed surface minus the ohmic losses Ohmic losses depends on the conductivity so simply I can say that power flowing out if any closed surface integral of E×H Now in above case (DC)since magnetic field set up by DC current is constant so as the electric field. So there is no there is no propagation of E and H outside the wire... It is just a set up of E and H. The stored energy due to electric and magnetic field outside the wire is not changing with time Sooooo..... Poynting theorem only depends upon conductivity. Since the conductivity of the medium outside the wire is zero ,,so it will not propagate outside the wire.... Derek is only looking at E × H in this video actually E× H is not propagating in case of DC According to him he can transmit energy wirelessly at 0 hz. Moreover he is right that current flow and energy flow are not in the same direction..... In case of AC you can transmit t using the above concept but then again you need some waveguide for the energy flow.

      @abhisheksamal1970@abhisheksamal19702 жыл бұрын
    • @@Stevie-J I really like TechIngredients and This Old Tony. Hope you like them!

      @rsa4510@rsa45102 жыл бұрын
  • I really loved this video. And I love more seeing EEs challenging each other, because guys we are learning a lot from your videos.

    @christiancabrera9495@christiancabrera94954 ай бұрын
  • This video from Veritasium made me discover this channel. I'll always be grateful to Derek for that and his content in general!

    @doofynetgraouw@doofynetgraouw2 жыл бұрын
  • I'm not smart enough for any of these videos.

    @JerryRigEverything@JerryRigEverything2 жыл бұрын
    • Hey you're putting an electric vehicle together, how bad can you be?!

      @ElectroBOOM@ElectroBOOM2 жыл бұрын
    • Now what is the conclusion of this discussion? Who is correct?

      @emmanuelnicholas7998@emmanuelnicholas79982 жыл бұрын
    • But you do comment on all of them

      @okkomp@okkomp2 жыл бұрын
    • Dont feel bad man. I try my best to be but Im not either. Lol

      @justincosby2258@justincosby22582 жыл бұрын
    • Jerry - "I'm not smart enough for any of these videos." *continues making an electric HMMWV before hummer ev comes out..

      @melwinmj@melwinmj2 жыл бұрын
  • Oh my god I was going to leave a comment and then you showed the two giant loops and I HAD to. I ran this experiment last weekend with 1km of wire and a ~20ns rise time “switch” and tried a bunch of variations including the two big loops - spoiler alert - the two loops makes the effect completely vanish within my ability to measure (without changing load resistance). I’m hoping to edit that all up ASAP but I had a question - in your analysis and in the great eevblog video, you both use the classic transmission line model with inductors and capacitors, and state that the coupling between the wires is predominantly capacitive, but in this case where you are only actively applying a current in one wire, should we be worrying about inductive coupling between the wires? Like a straight-line transformer? Like the capacitive effect, it would die out as soon as the current hit steady state and the magnetic fields weren’t changing, but I haven’t yet run the numbers to know if it’s super tiny relative to the capacitive coupling. I thought your analysis was fantastic, and now that I’ve done it for real I can confirm the traces you drew were extremely realistic. I’d add that on a wire that long in the real world, “any current” is basically all the time - especially in the wind… adding to your “always on” conclusion. There was enough noise that the scope was actually super hard to trigger… Thanks!

    @AlphaPhoenixChannel@AlphaPhoenixChannel2 жыл бұрын
    • Waiting for your video too

      @jagadishk4513@jagadishk45132 жыл бұрын
    • Looking forward to seeing your analysis too!

      @flyingchic3n@flyingchic3n2 жыл бұрын
    • would just be waiting to see results of your experiment

      @samdevsung@samdevsung2 жыл бұрын
    • I don't think the inductive coupling will be significant with 1m of separation, but it would be interesting to look into.

      @electronicswithemrys@electronicswithemrys2 жыл бұрын
    • "I bought a kilometer of wire to settle a physics debate!"

      @3zuli@3zuli2 жыл бұрын
  • Hi there, really appreciate this content. One question here is: what if we had a shielded cable?

    @3rdHarmonicInjector@3rdHarmonicInjectorАй бұрын
  • Electroboom, I'm a retired electrical engineer. I love your video. I wanted to say, importantly, the word is impedance NOT impotence!!! Yours is the third of three videos I've watched on this. First was Veritasiums, then Dave at EEVblog, then yours. Dave said that we engineers think about things differently. That we have tools to analyze things and validly track physics and the rules of science. You fellows have collectively reminded me of much of the complexity we were trained to understand and analyze and calculate. I've much forgotten what I was trained and educated to deal with. I've been so browbeaten by the mindless politics and public chaos of people and the media news etc. I've forgotten the promises of my youth and education. KZhead, multimedia and Internet is a terrible way to waste a capable mind. You've helped to retrieve my past capabilities. Thank you. Amind is a terrible thing to waste, and you've given me a wake-up call.

    @junkmail4613@junkmail46132 жыл бұрын
    • He's saying 'impedance', not 'impotence'. He's just placing the stress on a different syllable. 'ihm-peed-ANCE' instead of 'ihm-PEED-ance'

      @graybonesau@graybonesau3 күн бұрын
  • I just love how Mehdi explains everything in such an intuitive and visual way. Mehdi doesn't showboat to look smart, you can tell he's smart by how he brings you up to his level.

    @Niohimself@Niohimself2 жыл бұрын
    • Exactly. When one truly and deeply understand a subject, they can explain it to anyone.

      @igo5543@igo55432 жыл бұрын
    • He reminds me of my favorite physics teacher from school

      @pegasBaO23@pegasBaO232 жыл бұрын
    • Derek is also actually smart. I wouldn't say he "showboats to look smart" he just presents the information in an engaging way for general audiences. He doesn't need to look smart because he IS smart. Both creators can be good and smart, even when critiquing eachother. Especially when it comes to science.

      @baboonaiih@baboonaiih2 жыл бұрын
    • @@baboonaiih he smartness is irrelevant when he is trying to explain something to his audience, but he fails to do so

      @pegasBaO23@pegasBaO232 жыл бұрын
    • @@baboonaiih The way Derek fails to explain this matter to the general audience, being undeniably more cryptic than it should be (as shown by the electroboom explanation), gives me the impression that Veritassium didn't fully understand what he was trying to teach us. It would also explain why he was making deceptive, exaggerated, even fallacious claims in his video. There is also another explanation: he didn't care enough about trying to create a good, informative video as he previously always did, but instead distorted the facts to create a click-bait, by making an extraordinary and extremely counterintuitive claim. He has somewhat done it in the past: kzhead.info/sun/drFpkdOgeZiLh5s/bejne.html

      @igo5543@igo55432 жыл бұрын
  • I must say... well done! Very concise considering the topic. More than anything else, I am proud and excited that this level of technical discussion is happening with millions of people tuning in to watch.

    @JeremyFieldingSr@JeremyFieldingSr2 жыл бұрын
    • This is the modern-day equivalent of scientists and philosophers debating on stage with the public watching. We also have popcorn emoji now 🍿. Great times we live in.

      @yepo@yepo2 жыл бұрын
    • Indeed, it make KZhead more valuable. THX for that guys. P.S.: In Germany it is an kind of meme or insult when you have an discussion and someone say "have you learn this on KZhead university?"... For sure - on KZhead it lot of crap to see but for my understanding there is lot more of thoroughly elaborated articles that are scientifically proven. It drives me crazy that people are unable to tell what is bullshit and what is true... Common sense and some general knowledge and, on top of that, some research are usually sufficient to check the difference.

      @KarsonNow@KarsonNow2 жыл бұрын
    • Always a good content, good explanations and an incredible didactic power. Well done. I'm a fan

      @cristianoo2@cristianoo22 жыл бұрын
    • go figure! a superior video from someone who doesn't hide behind the name "truth"

      @fettmaneiii4439@fettmaneiii44392 жыл бұрын
    • Love your videos, Jeremy!

      @jrod1235@jrod12352 жыл бұрын
  • Not mentioning how well you are educating but you are so entertaining I voluntarily watched the sponsored parts of this video as well.

    @raytry69@raytry69 Жыл бұрын
  • This makes so much more sense than the Veritasium video! I actually had the same thought about the circle wire path.

    @michaelmc4025@michaelmc40252 жыл бұрын
  • These guys are the real reason that still KZhead got some value and the amount of knowledge they bring out here is simply immense and I hope many people are getting benefited by these kind of videos and a huge kudos to such content creaters love you all.

    @chandanmchatrapathi174@chandanmchatrapathi1742 жыл бұрын
    • Yes.

      @ThanhHoQuangCSE@ThanhHoQuangCSE2 жыл бұрын
  • Micrchip developer here: thank you very much for this video. Whilst to most of the people discussing this, the 300.000km wire with a Lamp is a hypothetical - we microchip developers deal with "lamps" that turn on and off in fractions of nanoseconds; a speed at which centimeters are like 300.000km to a lamp - and at which the reflections and slew rates described in your video are a well-known and always considered reality.

    @DrNo007@DrNo0072 жыл бұрын
    • Good point!

      @nyquillusdillwad9119@nyquillusdillwad91192 жыл бұрын
    • Average Joe: "So, how long is a nanosecond?" Physicist: "Oh, about a foot..." 😀

      @rustycherkas8229@rustycherkas82292 жыл бұрын
    • @Shimmy Shai It's a mix of maths, experience and simulation. There are a number of KZhead videos on the topic. For example: kzhead.info/sun/Z7qNpM9-bJiwgIU/bejne.html

      @DrNo007@DrNo0072 жыл бұрын
    • Ol

      @ishworshrestha3559@ishworshrestha35592 жыл бұрын
    • Norbert is correct.

      @jimbronson687@jimbronson6872 жыл бұрын
  • Just now noticed that when you were going through the choices, the light was doing them. How did you accomplish this? Curious how complicated or simplified it was

    @IanBLacy@IanBLacy Жыл бұрын
  • Thank you so much for this video! I watched Veritasium's video and was left feeling that everything I had learned about electricity was wrong and I was never going to understand how it really worked. After watching your video I have come to the conclusion that electricity is more complicated than I first thought but I should probably go back to thinking of it practically as electrons flowing through a continuous circuit as this has at least so far stopped me getting electrocuted and you are a special kind of genius to be able to not only understand all of this but also explain it in a way that is so entertaining and doesn't make me feel like an idiot.

    @finndixon8592@finndixon85922 жыл бұрын
    • There is practical and there is theoretical electrics. Practical is more than fine because a massive amount of assumptions can keep you safe. That being said, you don't violate the rules in those cases. Theoretical electrics tells you that static is not random and everything is calculated and nothing is too small.

      @bransonwalter5588@bransonwalter55882 жыл бұрын
  • I love that this almost makes a perfect 3 part series with the original video and Kurzgesagt's video about "lies". Such perfect timing.

    @CptPatch@CptPatch2 жыл бұрын
    • Ooohh, that's why i feel a bit familiar. because i just watch that video too 🤣

      @izzaazzurri@izzaazzurri2 жыл бұрын
    • This comment has blown my mind a little bit, thanks

      @ivankonishi7979@ivankonishi79792 жыл бұрын
    • it's 8:00 am here and it's the perfect video to see in the morning 🌄

      @Geniusinventor@Geniusinventor2 жыл бұрын
  • Being an electronics engineer myself, seeing Veritasium's video left me with some thoughts of "hmmm, I don't know if that's that..." Thank you for showing things were in fact the way I thought they were.

    @realhawaii5o@realhawaii5o2 жыл бұрын
    • I wouldn't say "in fact"

      @acommonman7950@acommonman79502 жыл бұрын
    • Me too!

      @TheDaspiffy@TheDaspiffy2 жыл бұрын
    • @@acommonman7950 I'll trust the thorough explanation of an expert over the simple doubt of a common man.

      @AdelaeR@AdelaeR2 жыл бұрын
    • @@AdelaeR Trust Veritasium.

      @acommonman7950@acommonman79502 жыл бұрын
    • Same here!

      @JyullianoRocha@JyullianoRocha2 жыл бұрын
  • I would have loved to have a teacher like this guy genuine love for his field.

    @InVQke@InVQke Жыл бұрын
  • I wished I had all these great videos while going to engineering school. Getting an electrical engineering degree would have been much easier and even more fun!

    @bixbe_sglearn@bixbe_sglearn2 жыл бұрын
  • This is why I love the science/tech sphere on KZhead. Love the interactions between channels and furthering of critical thought. Great video

    @ajwc137@ajwc1372 жыл бұрын
    • This should be most people's reaction but for some reason the commenters here turn it into a hate filled rage boner battle.

      @baboonaiih@baboonaiih2 жыл бұрын
    • @@baboonaiih people who truly understand know the sheer stupidity of Vertasium and many of his videos. So they comment accordingly. People who have passing interest can be spectators, be satisfied with Vertasium stupidity, and make comments like yours. Let me give you an analogy. Suppose a KZheadr made a video that a tire rolls down hill because the earth magnetic field pulls on the steel radials and not gravity. Would you be as kind to them, when you *know* the truth: gravity. Now imagine 6 million people going along with the KZheadr's stupidity, do you simply say oh well, it's all opinion and just a bonner battle. If you do, go stand in line for the stupid bus. It's getting full and you want to be sure you get on it.

      @joeboxter3635@joeboxter36352 жыл бұрын
    • @@joeboxter3635 so you think harass someone who made a wrong thing but sincerely sorry for it and will fix it in the future is cool lol? If you think you haven't done anything wrong in your life then you must have done nothing lol because people only not made mistakes when they did nothing. P.S: also your analogy is shit

      @lovell8983@lovell89832 жыл бұрын
    • @@baboonaiih And that's why we've been tricked by left vs right politics for so long

      @giantslug6969@giantslug69692 жыл бұрын
    • @@lovell8983 He has never admitted he made a mistake. In fact, he has doubled down. So don't even go there. And this is not the first such video. He is laughing all the way to the bank having made $30000 and counting on this video alone. Why does he have to do anything but take down video, if he admits he was wrong. And of course people said he was wrong around the 1 Million mark. He has made additional $25000 leaving it up, that's why. It's not harassment. It's speaking the truth. So just take the stupid bus. Let people know from "go" Vertasium is wrong say so. Just like EEblog, Electroboom, and handful of others who are calling Derk on his foolishness. The fact that you don't follow the analogy just says that you belong on the stupid bus, BTW. It's an example just like Derek's, where gullable people would fall prey for a fictional answer. And indeed there are many flat-earthers who have fallen for the magnetic explanation.

      @joeboxter3635@joeboxter36352 жыл бұрын
  • Thanks electroboom you are the man 😁 I feel much better about the world having listened to your commentary and noticed veritasium response. You guys are pretty cool, thanks.

    @embreetl@embreetl Жыл бұрын
  • I love it when someone makes a video/hypothesis about science and people, scientist, engineers from all over the world try to replicate the idea to try to prove/disprove this idea. It's the same concept used in academia but making it accessble to the world. +1 to youtube.

    @AhmedRizk3@AhmedRizk34 ай бұрын
  • I watched Veritasium's video when it came out, and knew I had only to wait for your excellent response. Is this (friendly) rivalry going to end with you both teaming up to create a real ~300,000km long circuit?

    @Merphle@Merphle2 жыл бұрын
    • NNNNOOOO! :)

      @ElectroBOOM@ElectroBOOM2 жыл бұрын
    • @@ElectroBOOM free energy?

      @robertaries2974@robertaries29742 жыл бұрын
    • @@ElectroBOOM As electrical engineering student, I really hated how people fanatically believed that his explanation is 100% right and who disagrees is just stupid.

      @marekholub8668@marekholub86682 жыл бұрын
    • You just need a couple of meter of a cable triggered source and fast scope. The delays in the signal will be clearly distinguishable.

      @TheSucread@TheSucread2 жыл бұрын
    • @@ElectroBOOM Don't you have like 150,000 km of ball-chain already laying around from your last controversy? :D

      @henrysalayne@henrysalayne2 жыл бұрын
  • 7:34 blew my mind, the transmission line analogy blew my mind even more. Now I feel disqualified holding an electrical degree. When I watched Veritasium's video it made me more confused; while your video actually gave a very detailed picture of what Veritasium is trying to describe, props to you ElectroBoom :)

    @happilicious@happilicious2 жыл бұрын
    • The transmission line analogy is only valid though if the two lines are close to each other in order for the cross capacity to exist at a reasonable value.

      @embeddor2230@embeddor22302 жыл бұрын
    • @@embeddor2230 No, only valid if the space between the two wires is far smaller than the length of the wires. Which it is. 2-wire lines are COUNTERINTUITIVE. Also, we're NOT allowed to ignore the inductance per unit length. That creates the magnetic part of the EM fields. For example, transmission-line calculator says that 1mm wires spaced one meter apart have a line-impedance of 911 ohms. Or bring those wires only 1cm apart, giving Zo of 360 ohms. So, going from one meter gap to 1/100 meter only changes the characteristic impedance by less than three! (Or, go from 1M to 10M spacing, and the Zo goes from 911 ohms to 1190 ohms, only a 30% increase with TEN METER SPACING. If Veritasium used an LED, then it would immediately light, even if the space between wires was 10M rather than 1M.)

      @wbeaty@wbeaty2 жыл бұрын
    • Imaginary electrons LOL. Funny dystopian pseudoscientist "electroboom".

      @lukiepoole9254@lukiepoole92542 жыл бұрын
    • ​@@embeddor2230 > The transmission line analogy is only valid though if the two lines are close to each other So you appear to be saying this? ...if two long wires are one meter apart, they don't form a capacitor anymore. The gap is too large! Also this: if a big wire loop is made 1M in diameter, it stops being an inductor. The wires are too far apart from each other! If that's not what you're saying, then your claim appears to be an unsupported newbie misconception. As wire-gap increases, and if the wire diameter remains the same, the Zo line impedance doesn't increase as inverse-square or inverse-cube! These lines are closely coupled (very long, where the 1M gap is almost insignificant. That's why we can apply transmission-line physics.) Transmission lines are COUNTERINTUITIVE, and if we aren't RF engineers with some EM fields/waves classwork under our belts, we're going to be trapped in newbie physics-misconceptions. For example, how does the Zo line impedance increase, as we separate the wires? Start at 1cm, using Dereck's cables (which appear to be roughly 5mm diameter.) Gap size M | Zo in ohms 0.01 - - - - - - 158 0.02 - - - - - - 247 0.05 - - - - - - 359 0.1 - - - - - - 442 0.2 - - - - - - 525 0.5 - - - - - - 635 1.0 - - - - - - 718 That's from the online calculator at Clemson TL_calculator... cecas.clemson.edu/cvel/emc/calculators/TL_Calculator/index.html To bad Veritasium didn't have his wires be 10M apart! With 5mm cables, the Zo is only 1K. Then use a 220VDC battery, and light up a bulb, where the billion-foot lines are only putting 2K ohms in series with the light bulb. .

      @wbeaty@wbeaty2 жыл бұрын
    • veritasium is a fool as he not taking impedance values into the equation..light takes a second to reach the moon.current flow will be slower due to the resistance of the wire at power up.

      @jazzytimes2373@jazzytimes23732 жыл бұрын
  • I work at a high voltage company. A good explanation of inrush this is. We still don't have long 100km 380kV AC cables, because the initial voltage is too high when the cable is switched on what would create a fault in the insulation of the cable, or in the the installation.

    @s0012823@s0012823 Жыл бұрын
  • Truly enjoyed the details! Well addressed. Thanks!

    @dhruvpatel6378@dhruvpatel6378 Жыл бұрын
  • I love the pun in science where a mathematical vector points in the direction of energy flow was pointed out by the scientist John Poynting and for which we credit him and call it the Poynting vector.

    @kreynolds1123@kreynolds11232 жыл бұрын
    • You may also like: symmetries in manifolds, the Killing vector en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Killing_vector_field

      @martinkuffer5643@martinkuffer56432 жыл бұрын
    • Not as funny, but there’s also the Shockley equation for diodes

      @WaffleAbuser@WaffleAbuser2 жыл бұрын
    • well guy had a poynt to make \(Oo)/

      @Cypeq@Cypeq2 жыл бұрын
    • he was the first to orient his finger in the direction of something of interest, before that people just waved their fists and shouted

      @magicalpencil@magicalpencil2 жыл бұрын
    • @@WaffleAbuser People usually take it the wrong way though.

      @Pronobozo@Pronobozo2 жыл бұрын
  • Oh well done, this is by a LONG way the best presentation of this I've seen so far. I've been pulling my hair out for weeks. I've been utterly astonished at the uniformity in misunderstanding that has existed on this topic since Derek's video. Even scientists with a PhD have overlooked the basic things you pointed out with such clarity in your video. I'm so pleased there is now a video by someone who knows what they are talking about that is as comprehensive as this. There's a few other topics you could have covered, such as the Poynting vector and superconductors, how the potential energy in the vicinity of the bulb (carried there by the wires) is transformed into light and heat energy in the bulb and the Poynting vector corresponds precisely to this in the vicinity of the bulb, how radiative energy is distinguished from potential energy in the electromagnetic field, how ohmic heating works and how the Poynting vector points into the wire (at the surface) when the wire is not superconducting, how the speed of transmission is related to the dielectric constant and so on. But you covered the most important topics for understanding Derek's original video, which I consider to be quite misleading.

    @goodwillhart@goodwillhart2 жыл бұрын
    • Yeah, PhD doesn't mean that people keep knowledge they've gained close to their heart

      @blinded6502@blinded65022 жыл бұрын
    • @@blinded6502 doesent Mehdi also have a PhD?

      @fabianvandermijde4066@fabianvandermijde40662 жыл бұрын
    • @@blinded6502 Those people with PhD are not wrong, but they jump right into the Poynting vectors and deep physics, ignoring the big picture. They have pre-existing knowledge about these things, they already know the good explanation, and that’s what they agree with, not what is in the video. They don’t understand how confusing it is for someone with “only” high school level knowledge, especially when that high school was a decade ago.

      @juzoli@juzoli2 жыл бұрын
  • 1) I love the creative and thoughtful response explanation to the Veritasium video. I was thoroughly intrigued when I initially watched it since it took my thinking out of the box. I'm sure it's hard for Derek to make videos that captivate his audience and still afford him to make a good living just talking about science without boring the masses. 2) Both videos make me wish my engineering degree had landed me a job that was more technical than modifying paperwork and instructions for a manufacturing company. I don't get to do science anymore and am actually discouraged from "turning investigations into an experiment" :( 3) I forgot how awesome @electroboom videos are! I first stumbled across your videos when making a coil gun in Physics class. My favorite is still your electric guitar.

    @brynmrsh@brynmrsh2 жыл бұрын
    • I don't have a science degree yet I feel like Derick's videos are too condescending to his audience, and wish he and other science youtube personalities would drop this notion that they need to oversimplify topics in order to be palatable to a wider audience, yet when people call them out on being too overly simplistic, he gets overly pedantic in defending himself.

      @MrAlziepen@MrAlziepen2 жыл бұрын
    • @@MrAlziepen I agree with the latter half of your comment, but the oversimplification is definitely part of the success. The simpler the explanations, the wider the audience (younger people, people that don’t pay full attention to videos) - even if that means going beyond what would be needed for the average person. Alienizing a small part of the community that calls out this behavior is not as big of a deal as losing out on extra viewers. This also depends on the type of audience one carves and wants, of course.

      @hackerulroman@hackerulroman2 жыл бұрын
    • Just cause you simplify it doesn’t mean people understand it!

      @internalizedhappyness9774@internalizedhappyness9774 Жыл бұрын
  • I liked Darek's video but it is important to understand that reality is often not the ideal. Honestly it was a good video and it helped me understand a concept I struggled with in school. Also I like this video as well as reminds us of all the factors involved.

    @Jason_Wilhelm@Jason_Wilhelm2 жыл бұрын
  • "It's the field that carries the energy, not the electrons" is the 2022 version of "It's the current that kills, not the voltage".

    @doid3r4s@doid3r4s2 жыл бұрын
  • The biggest thing you've demonstrated here is that the field strengths are strongest when closest to the wires. That alone clears up the main issue with Veritasium's video I think!

    @chriswatts5921@chriswatts59212 жыл бұрын
    • I think the main issue with his video is that he said that electrons moving through a conductor is not how energy is carried in a circuit. It takes energy to get the electrons moving and without those moving electrons no energy is transmitted. Sure, they do so in the form of EM fields, but it's the moving charges that generate those fields. It's like saying a hydro dam doesn't get its energy through the movement of water, but instead through the influence of gravitational fields.

      @jasonpatterson8091@jasonpatterson80912 жыл бұрын
    • Yes, Veritasium confused 2 different things: - Electricity is propagated around the wire, but still close to it, following it. - If you attach a battery and a switch to a piece of wire, and start switching it (like a Morse code), you created a radio transmitter. One is good for transferring electric energy, other is good for transferring information.

      @juzoli@juzoli2 жыл бұрын
    • Agreed. Derek implies that most of the energy is flowing through space, which it's not. Those fields are going to be concentrated almost entirely along the wires. It was also really wrong for Derek to say that "it's not what's happening in the wires that matters". If that was the case, then why would you need wires at all?

      @DeusExAstra@DeusExAstra2 жыл бұрын
    • Yes, Derek's argument was all qualitative while leaving out ANY quatitative qualifications which usually leads to severe misunderstandings and wrong conclusions. Sometimes you really have to do-the-math to understand what's really going on.

      @carlhoward5469@carlhoward54692 жыл бұрын
    • @@jasonpatterson8091 Oh man that hydro dam is a great analogy, thank you

      @KalebPeters99@KalebPeters992 жыл бұрын
  • That was just the next level sharing of knowledge. I love it.

    @tredfo9697@tredfo96972 жыл бұрын
  • That explanation is pure gold. Should be listed as recommended literature in all universities with electricity related faculties.

    @piotrszewczyk9749@piotrszewczyk97492 жыл бұрын
  • The thing I learned in uni is that "energy" is literally anything that _can_ do something. A ball on top of a desk has energy, potential gravitational energy. So yes, the EM field carries energy. But a moving electron creates EM fields that carries energy. So, in a way, electrons (moving ones) are carrying energy. It's a useful abstraction! Derek's video also rubbed me the wrong way, especially how the light turns on at _any_ energy level. I figured that in that case, the distance from the switch to the light bulb would be significant, since it should carry _some_ energy, or something like that. I think the general premise of his video is good, but the dissmissal of abstractions and trick question did a disservice to it, in my opinion. Loved this one tho!

    @minoxs@minoxs2 жыл бұрын
    • ahahaha astolfo funny words

      @vi23a@vi23a2 жыл бұрын
    • His video also bothered me because his answer would be the same (1/c) if you had an open circuit at both ends of lines. It all boils down him being technically correct but pretty wrong in practice. It also doesn't help that he's basically clickbaiting and fooling a large audience into thinking they were taught wrong their whole lives.

      @flatbob123@flatbob1232 жыл бұрын
    • One of my best physics teachers in uni used to tell us that energy is just a "conversion currency" between different phenomena, once again, a useful abstraction.

      @Fred_Costa@Fred_Costa2 жыл бұрын
    • I don't know if I'm being naive here. But I think the point of Derek's video was to show that energy is carried by fields, The trick question and the exaggeration are means of engagement. And I think this because of his videos on clickbait and viral videos. what is good: it creates a chain of videos that respond to his, and leads his viewers to these videos. Since the alghorith tends to couple videos of simmilar topics and audiencies what is bad: He could have achieved the notion he wanted. That energy doensn't goes through wires (wich we done well), and after that, actually ground his clains, remove te hyperboles, and explain that distance hardly relates with power. The problem with his aproach in my opinion is (if this was his aproach): his original claim, that we were taught to us is wrong, what he ultimatelly did, is also wrong, but in the reverse direction. The naive defence that I kinda have is that his intent is to create more videos about, and simultaneously raise awareness to the subject and other creators, but how could someone judge the sucess of this (if is really his intent) and wouldn't it fu** his credibility if after the video you don't know if he was tolding the truth or running some kind of community awareness experiment?

      @dan1RR@dan1RR2 жыл бұрын
    • @@dan1RR I make your words mine, couldn't have put it any better. One thing I'd like to add is about the "you were taught wrong" approach. While it is true to some extent to say that and brings in views, I'm much more fond of kurzgesagt's approach. Which is to say "you were taught wrong, err, sort of". The "lies" we're taught are just simplifications and abstractions of a messy reality, so that we can slowly build up our notion of the universe. Derek just says "you were taught wrong" and doesn't elaborate any further. It's almost paradoxical, he is diving deeper into a subject while also staying at a shallow level. Which is why I believe it was a disservice to himself. I hope my point makes sense ;w;

      @minoxs@minoxs2 жыл бұрын
  • Very technical explanations. I watched that video about magnetic current and I was wondering if there was a decent agreement or disagreement. I guess the main importance is creating circuits that work and do the job they were designed to do, regardless of the explanations.

    @eldonjanzen9822@eldonjanzen98222 жыл бұрын
  • i love it when he started the simulator. i have no idea how to interpret or any background to the topic. but his answer is pointed to the question. kind of like a research paper.

    @FriedBread@FriedBread Жыл бұрын
  • While watching Derek's video i thought about my transmission line class in college. I remembered very little of it but his explanation just didn't seem right. ElectroBoom brought it all back in a rush of educational bliss! My mind is now at peace.

    @ryancarter2146@ryancarter21462 жыл бұрын
  • Thanks for this brilliant explanation. I like how you point out the "transmission line" property of the setup. As an RF engineer I tip my hat :-)

    @Alexander91@Alexander912 жыл бұрын
    • Another RF engineer here. Some thoughts that I want to shared wit you: The large peak Electroboom saw in his LTSpice simulation at t=0 is due to the capacitance of the TX line (as he mentioned), which is a short-circuit for the high-frequency content of the voltage step created when closing the switch. I think that in reality high frequencies are radiated from the battery wires to the lamp wires (a.k.a. a spark TX ) and a small amount of energy is picked by the lamp. That energy arrives 1/c seconds after switch is closed. It is just not enough to turn on the lamp, but I think that pulse (or transient) is what Veritasium was addressing as "lamp on"

      @pyrokinetikrlz@pyrokinetikrlz2 жыл бұрын
    • I took a rf course and I'm glad it lays out a very important foundation for me to understand pcb level transmission line stuff and of course questions like this.

      @johnyang799@johnyang7992 жыл бұрын
    • Enjoy your small victory engineers; Physicists rule!

      @Ducktility@Ducktility2 жыл бұрын
    • @@Ducktility Your comment is how to tell someone is still in school and isn't yet a physicist with an engineering job. Seriously though most physicists I know still consider RF black magic. It is one thing to know the fundamentals on a base physical level, its another to make it happen.

      @Noubers@Noubers2 жыл бұрын
    • @@Noubers You don't really understand fundamental research, do you? I'll give you a small example: Theoretical physics: Hypothesize electrons Applied physics: Discover and demonstrate electroluminescence Engineering: Improve LED efficiency and make it useful to the world.

      @Ducktility@Ducktility2 жыл бұрын
  • Thank you for this video, can you do a video on reactive power, explaining it in detail, I recently read a paper suggesting that the concept behind reactive power is flawed and it presents a new general power theory.

    @reginaldgroenewald7686@reginaldgroenewald76862 жыл бұрын
  • Now that the follow up video is here, I am amazed that how much Mr. ElectroBOOM understands the concept clearly. He casually explaned the time response poynting vectors on pen and paper Aand it was exactly what we got in ANSYS simulations in Derek video

    @monishreddy4466@monishreddy44662 жыл бұрын
  • The demonstration that the LED turns on without closing the loop for a high frequency signal was brilliant! Amazing video, as always!

    @LiraLab@LiraLab2 жыл бұрын
    • i still cannot wrap my mind around how exactly is that possible. Can someone explain in different words whats happening there? Or explain it like im 5 or something

      @bartosik321@bartosik3212 жыл бұрын
    • @@bartosik321 AC current is wack and doesn't need a wire to connect it to ground, it'll find other ways to reach ground through the air

      @maxspencerkarinen6463@maxspencerkarinen64632 жыл бұрын
    • that was some black magic ive never seen before

      @Sumguy21@Sumguy212 жыл бұрын
    • Poynting theorem states that closed surface integral of E×H = rate of decrese of energy stored by electric field and magnetic field in the volume of closed surface minus the ohmic losses Ohmic losses depends on the conductivity so simply I can say that power flowing out if any closed surface integral of E×H Now in above case (DC)since magnetic field set up by DC current is constant so as the electric field. So there is no there is no propagation of E and H outside the wire... It is just a set up of E and H. The stored energy due to electric and magnetic field outside the wire is not changing with time Sooooo..... Poynting theorem only depends upon conductivity. Since the conductivity of the medium outside the wire is zero ,,so it will not propagate outside the wire.... Derek is only looking at E × H in this video actually E× H is not propagating in case of DC According to him he can transmit energy wirelessly at 0 hz. Moreover he is right that current flow and energy flow are not in the same direction..... In case of AC you can transmit t using the above concept but then again you need some waveguide for the energy flow.

      @abhisheksamal1970@abhisheksamal19702 жыл бұрын
    • Basically, there is a parasitic capacitance between the separate loops. So, the higher the frequency, the lower the parasitic impedance and the signal passes through the air (dielectric) and reaches the other wires.

      @LiraLab@LiraLab2 жыл бұрын
  • This is great. I am also in EE and I agree with everything said here. Derek’s. video is a bit incomplete which is rare for him. He did deserve this.

    @MartinME3@MartinME32 жыл бұрын
    • He talked about demonstrating this with an experiment, so I wonder if he was being intentionally vague in order to make a follow-up that explains things more thoroughly.

      @asj3419@asj34192 жыл бұрын
    • I don't think it is rare for him.

      @Elrog3@Elrog32 жыл бұрын
    • @@Elrog3 any other vids?

      @Harambe8@Harambe82 жыл бұрын
    • @@Elrog3 damn really nailed him... maybe???

      @boxcar9407@boxcar94072 жыл бұрын
    • ​@@Harambe8 A month ago he did a question in a community post and a video about a string hanging from a helicopter. It was an inadequately defined question. I remember there were some about cosmology or particle physics that didn't sit well from years ago. Its not always the basis of the whole video, but it does seem about every other video (that I watch) he will say something questionable.

      @Elrog3@Elrog32 жыл бұрын
  • Great explanation, I learned a new thing about AC behaviour with the oscilloscope. Instant subscribe!

    @mrkkj@mrkkj Жыл бұрын
  • I am thoroughly enjoying these back and forth videos.

    @tbellavitano7068@tbellavitano70682 жыл бұрын
  • If I had a professor like you in college, I would have been an electrical engineer and not a mechanical engineer. It's so facinating and amazing and you do such a great job of explaining it!

    @Aetherlight021@Aetherlight0212 жыл бұрын
    • It really makes all the difference, doesn't it?

      @rg500delta@rg500delta2 жыл бұрын
    • You are an electrical engineer and don't know it. There's a LOT of overlap. Many of the equations and concepts are the same. Enjoy!

      @johnchestnut5340@johnchestnut53402 жыл бұрын
  • As someone who took one course of electrical engineering in college, I also thought the Veritasium video felt like a trick question and left me kinda confused. This video made it clear what was actually happening.

    @rokushou@rokushou2 жыл бұрын
    • yeah.. maybe theoretical physics mixed in with real world application.

      @wallieshere@wallieshere2 жыл бұрын
  • Omg I had that question in my mind for a long time. Thank you guys for making science more amazing.

    @depresty@depresty Жыл бұрын
  • Your enthusiasm about your chosen topic is admirable. :)

    @nyscersul42@nyscersul422 жыл бұрын
  • Saying electrons are not carrying energy is like saying it's the current that kills not the voltage.

    @Astri.electronics@Astri.electronics2 жыл бұрын
    • Heh, in fact in that case since electrons don't carry energy, current doesn't kill at all!

      @ElectroBOOM@ElectroBOOM2 жыл бұрын
    • @@ElectroBOOM At least that would explain why you're still alive!

      @anlumo1@anlumo12 жыл бұрын
    • It is an abstract concept anyway, and the answer depends on how we define “carrying energy”. In reality it is a continuous interaction wave between electrons, propagated by the fields between them. So saying that electrons carry the energy is perfectly fine, if we are describing it at a higher level of abstraction.

      @juzoli@juzoli2 жыл бұрын
    • "It is not the water that carries the energy into a turbine. It is the fluid velocity field!"

      @SKyrim190@SKyrim1902 жыл бұрын
    • It _is_ the current. Consider a cosmic "ray" that's actually a particle. You get hit by those all the time, and the energy of the particle is ridiculously high. But you don't die. Now take a hammer and swing it at your head with an absurdly lower amount of energy per particle, and you may very well die. Same principle as a high voltage and low current due to supply, rather than resistance. It's trivial to zap yourself harmlessly with over a million volts, with a big enough Van de Graaff generator. It's also trivial to kill yourself with just 120 volts from a wall outlet.

      @TrueThanny@TrueThanny2 жыл бұрын
  • I'm always astounded by the amazing quality of those unexpected edits

    @baalberi7h222@baalberi7h2222 жыл бұрын
  • Nice clarifying vid ! I was just thinking, sometimes we say we're looking at the past when watching the stars, because of the time needed for their light to reach us. In that case, we could say the lamp is looking at the past when watching the end of the transmission line. So when we close the switch, the lamp is still seeing the end of the line as unaffected for a little while ; thus she's not getting the full power of a closed circuit. I hope it makes sense

    @Nooz5@Nooz57 ай бұрын
  • I am an electronic engineer and Dereks video made me question my education. I think of that as a good outcome. And I immediately wrote he was wrong. I am so glad Boom made this.

    @MrAshwijshenoy@MrAshwijshenoy2 жыл бұрын
    • I Indian?

      @styrishrodrigues@styrishrodrigues2 жыл бұрын
    • same happened to me, but i am salf taught on electricity and electronics...i got so lost on his video that i wrote comments to disagree with it...for me the light only turns on when enough current flows to make it glow, he never referred to the wires as big antennas or a capacitor and he never mentioned leakage current, he also never mentioned background fields and he never mentioned how irrelevant all of that is on a frickin DC 12 lightbulb circuit, if he explicitly mentioned that, then i would understand the subject instead of wasting all my brain cells to find ways to disagree with him

      @MrHBSoftware@MrHBSoftware2 жыл бұрын
  • Kurz did a very good video on the "lies" of science communication's required simplifications of complex topics. But the way Veratasium said that we were taught "lies". Annoyed me a lot especially when he hyper simplified his example down and ignored so many potential losses or other important variables in his explanation. Which as you have shown in this video is a "lie", ie simplifcation of a topic. He took issue with a "lie" then explained why he thought it was a "lie" by "lying" about it? Why is it not as clear if not clearer to explain that its a nessecary simplification for base level understanding of electricity? Rather than to give the impression that people are being taught falsehoods. Potentially damaging peoples trust in the education they have been given on other topics.

    @Spidd124@Spidd1242 жыл бұрын
    • Amen. His video leaves people with two false impressions: Wires are irrelevant Science lies to you

      @sledzeppelin@sledzeppelin2 жыл бұрын
    • Kurz calling simplifications for lies is really handing a big point over to the weirder side of the "do your own research"-group.

      @heat1235@heat12352 жыл бұрын
    • Well, he did the exact opposite to what Kurz is trying to do - he took a pretty simple and quite valid model and complicated it with what he presented as "fields and vectors magic"

      @iteratortv@iteratortv2 жыл бұрын
    • Yeah exactly quite disappointing to say the least

      @tacct1kk715@tacct1kk7152 жыл бұрын
    • This is especially gross considering the massive amount of science denialism going on today with climate change and covid. These people know better than to label these models lies.

      @kingkarlito@kingkarlito2 жыл бұрын
  • Bravo! Thank you so much for the context and entertainment!

    @markscott9622@markscott9622 Жыл бұрын
  • Superb... As usual.. 👍👍 Keenly looking forward to seeing more.. 😊

    @jagannathghimire3039@jagannathghimire30392 жыл бұрын
  • I just friggin love the fact that the past months I discovered a ton of new engineering channels I hadn’t known about when they dispute Derek’s video lol. Which made this video long awaited for me, I just love to see your explanation.

    @needadoseofdumbvaccine88@needadoseofdumbvaccine882 жыл бұрын
    • bro pls share some of those channels quickly

      @michaeloloyede8670@michaeloloyede86702 жыл бұрын
    • @@michaeloloyede8670 😆

      @DrOtto-sx7cp@DrOtto-sx7cp2 жыл бұрын
    • @@michaeloloyede8670 The Big Misconception About Electricity - Is Veritasium Right - RSD Academy EEVblog 1439 - Analysing Veritasium's Electricity Misconceptions Video Is Veritasium Wrong About Electricity? - Dr Ben Miles That's some videos on this matter.

      @needadoseofdumbvaccine88@needadoseofdumbvaccine88 Жыл бұрын
  • The editing is on another level, amazing to see how the channel is developing over time

    @omarhurani@omarhurani2 жыл бұрын
  • Small correction for the formula at 12:51. That's only valid for DC. To get the gereral impedance you sum an infinite series to get that z = sqrt(L/C - omega^2 * L^2/4) + i * omega * L / 2, with omega the angular frequency and i = sqrt(-1).

    @odysseus9672@odysseus96722 жыл бұрын
  • Well done. I think you clarify what Veritasium messed up. You give a proper model for the problem.

    @jsmorenus8038@jsmorenus80382 жыл бұрын
  • Veritasium made it explicitly clear in earlier videos that they optimise their content for the KZhead algorithm and to maximise viewer numbers, and prioritises this above the desire to provide content that educates. The Veritasium video was carefully calculated to be click-bait and cause maximum outrage and confusion in order to boost viewer numbers. By this metric, Derek's video was a highly successful money maker. This profit was however achieved at the expense of annoying everyone who already understands transmission-line theory, and insulting engineering teachers by calling them liars.

    @MaxWattage@MaxWattage2 жыл бұрын
    • Bingo. Veritasium used to be good, now it's click bait trash.

      @T3hJimmer@T3hJimmer2 жыл бұрын
    • Echoing this. Veritasium changed from education to clickbait several years ago now.

      @NefariousDestiny@NefariousDestiny2 жыл бұрын
    • I remind you all that it was his thesis that tricking people into the wrong answer would lead to better learning. So he went asking people on the streets and shows the wrong answers on the video, to then show the explanation. Baiting and triggering question always were in him.

      @Theraot@Theraot2 жыл бұрын
    • AGREEEED. YOU NAILED IT. SO TRUE.

      @nsfeliz7825@nsfeliz78252 жыл бұрын
    • Lmfao this was not even close to what he said in his video on clickbait 🤡

      @purplewine7362@purplewine73622 жыл бұрын
  • When designing high frequency circuit boards, you have to often match the length of the tracks carrying particularly high frequency signals. In many cases, these tracks are bunched up like a winding river. The veritasium video suggests that this would mean that the signal only respected the shortest distance possible, but instead we find that the signal pays much more attention to the total length of the track.

    @YoutubeHandlesSuckBalls@YoutubeHandlesSuckBalls2 жыл бұрын
    • Did you come up with that while microdosing?

      @Shinkajo@Shinkajo2 жыл бұрын
    • Truth.

      @Soupy_loopy@Soupy_loopy2 жыл бұрын
    • @@Shinkajo I assume you mean, while designing circuit boards for a doser that uses a microcontroller. In which case, yes.

      @YoutubeHandlesSuckBalls@YoutubeHandlesSuckBalls2 жыл бұрын
    • Your trace is not millions of times longer than the signal involved. Ver's hypothetical example was, which is part of why it's so misleading.

      @tsm688@tsm6882 жыл бұрын
  • Nice to see linus influence of your background. It was refreshing to see your family and house

    @googlenutzer3384@googlenutzer33842 ай бұрын
  • This is actually quite a common phenomenon. Many popular wide-topic blogs (sci-pop included) seem at first really comprehensive, until they hit one's specific field of knowledge, at which point one realizes they are superficial, inacurate and often misleading concerning even essential details.

    @user-vo8ss2bm3p@user-vo8ss2bm3p Жыл бұрын
  • Excellent explanation

    @TimeBucks@TimeBucks2 жыл бұрын
    • says timebucks, of all people

      @windowsxseven@windowsxseven2 жыл бұрын
  • 2:51 - "You little... Derek!" Boom, roasted.

    @vidhoard@vidhoard2 жыл бұрын
  • Best ElectroBOOM video ever, very relaxing, educational and interesting thoughts inside.

    @cherrybacon9790@cherrybacon97902 жыл бұрын
  • This is exactly right. Thank you for presenting a good engineering analysis. This is so much better than the original. At t=0, the long lines are simply sucking in energy like resistors at R=z0.

    @pdaddy_@pdaddy_2 жыл бұрын
    • It isn't. EMF causes a displacement current that can act as soon as an electron can reach the location you are detecting the current. While this value is very very very low compared to the full current on a super conductor after full propagation, it is a valid path of EMF flow. He gave it away horribly when he said "any current at all". If he said full current, it would be Electroboom is falling into the engineering trap of direct simplification without fundamentally understanding the full reasons for those simplifications. He knows enough to be dangerous but not enough to truly know the extreme conditionals which bite you hard.

      @bransonwalter5588@bransonwalter55882 жыл бұрын
  • As an electrical engineer myself, I knew SOMETHING was wrong with Derek's video; I just couldn't pin point exactly what. Thank you for making this very detailed explanation!

    @rickiheerdt7690@rickiheerdt76902 жыл бұрын
    • Put your diploma down sir. Any respectable electrical engineer knows this.

      @lazar2175@lazar21752 жыл бұрын
    • @@lazar2175 well most engineers aren't familiar with transmission lines, just sayin.

      @joefuentes2977@joefuentes29772 жыл бұрын
    • The problem is that he implies that power transmission is done in the same way as radio transmission.

      @nilshagness8055@nilshagness80552 жыл бұрын
    • @@joefuentes2977 Dude, he called himself Electrical Engineer. His literal job is to design power transmission lines, transformers etc. He must know this stuff - I don't believe a single college will let you graduate with EE diploma without knowing this. Hell this is high school stuff, he just worded it super weird and used a trick to con people into assuming a false answer, as explained by Mehdi. Anyway, a real EE engineer should be able to see through it.

      @lazar2175@lazar21752 жыл бұрын
    • @@lazar2175 People study one field, and then start to work in something else, it happens. Stop trying to find flaws, nobody cares.

      @antoniousai1989@antoniousai19892 жыл бұрын
  • I love how some of the best tech KZheadrs are getting into debates, ultimately educating us in a more in depth fashion than if it were otherwise. As long as it stays into the domain of constructive criticism, these videos will be some of the best content around. Thanks @electroboom and @veritasium!

    @swapneeldatta2297@swapneeldatta22972 жыл бұрын
    • Fr I really love how a video moved others to make more videos about it to find the truth and I an interesting wsy

      @DavidGarcia-nx2gj@DavidGarcia-nx2gj2 жыл бұрын
    • Except *Derek's* video was pure garbage; really misleading. SMDH

      @nossingo@nossingo2 жыл бұрын
    • Derek is not a best tech KZhead, not even a little. If you watch his videos he wanna look like a star talking to people to show them how stupid they are, and trying to learn from professors. Its a personal diary about himself, how he risks his life, how he wins a debate etc

      @capjus@capjus2 жыл бұрын
    • The downside of the youtube debate format is that smaller channels have less (sometimes no) visibility, so even when they are correct, the lay public never sees their corrections, and only see videos from large channels, even when the content in them is misleading or just plain wrong. Not all viewers will dig through the myriad response videos to find the answer, and even those that do may not have the scientific or technical background to understand the arguments being made.

      @Vasharan@Vasharan2 жыл бұрын
    • @@Vasharan Absolutely correct. That's why rich people who run moneymaking accounts like Derek's have a very big responsibility, and their negligence is rightly criticized very harshly. Clickbait BS shouldn't be rewarded.

      @nossingo@nossingo2 жыл бұрын
  • I watched Veritasium's video first, and, while confused, I learned the interesting idea of energy flowing around the wire. After watching yours (despite getting a bit lost in the second half) I understand better how it actually works

    @anonymoususer3561@anonymoususer35612 жыл бұрын
    • 6:45 "...a hundred times weaker". Can you explain how that works, as you can't quantify weakness? Or do you mean one hundredth as strong?

      @bremset@bremset2 жыл бұрын
    • @@bremset I think that’s the commonly agreed understanding of that phrase. When the adjective describes getting closer to 0 of some value, the multiplication uses the inverse value. Becoming weaker is trending in the direction of 0 strength, so 100 times weaker means 100 times closer to 0 strength, or a multiplication by 1/100. This is language dependent, because you have to already agree that weakness isn’t quantifiable alone, but only by reference to some amount of strength. 0 weakness doesn’t fit into reality as well as 0 strength does. Just like how infinite strength is unrealistic but infinite weakness is realistic. You can argue against these assumptions scientifically, but to understand the phrase “100 times weaker” as it is commonly used, you have to start by agreeing with them.

      @diggoran@diggoran2 жыл бұрын
    • @johnnytheprick i dont know. I tried to post in the main thread. But now you've replied to weirdo yourself 😅

      @bremset@bremset2 жыл бұрын
KZhead