Cursed Units

2023 ж. 1 Қаң.
2 012 656 Рет қаралды

A collection of cursed scientific units.
What If? article: what-if.xkcd.com/11
Dimensional analysis: • Bomb Blast Radius - Nu...
Distance in astronomy: • Father Ted: 'Small' vs...
Pulsar scintillation: arxiv.org/pdf/astro-ph/0111034
Background music was me improvising on a piano.
Some small corrections: the distances between the planets in the graphics should be between their centres, and the wording when describing the pulse delays is backwards at one point.
If you know any other cursed units, share them in the comments! Here's some more (look for the hearted comments to see the original posts)...
Noise in a voltage signal is measured in V/√Hz (volts per square root hertz).
You would expect the amount of data produced by a particle collider over a time period to be measured in bytes or number of collisions, but apparently it's measured in fb^-1, inverse femtobarns, a barn being roughly the cross-sectional area of a uranium nucleus.
Other variations of kWh from commenters: kWh/annum contains seconds, hours and years all mashed together. Also lightbulb power consumption is sometimes displayed in kWh/1000h which, if I'm not mistaken, is Watts. This is probably to avoid confusion with the other use of watts which is to measure lightbulb brightness, which would all be fixed if anyone cared about lumens or candela.
There's an alternative to SI units called CGS, centimetre-gram-second. In CGS, units of charge are derived, and because they really shouldn't be derived there's multiple conflicting standards. One of these is to define charge using the statcoulomb, equal to 1 g^(1/2) cm^(3/2) s^(-1).
Multiplication and division of units is all well and good, but it breaks down when you're working with units on logarithmic scales, like pH, decibels, or stellar magnitude.
Sheet resistance, the electrical resistivity of rectangular sheets of materials, is measured in Ohms per square. Not square metres, not square inches, just square. This is because resistance across a rectangle is proportional to length and inversely proportional to width, so it depends on the aspect ratio but not the size.
A barrer is unit of gas permeability used for membranes and contact lenses, and it is equal to 10^(-10) cm^3(STP) cm / (cm^2 s cmHg). The 4 occurrences of ‘centimetres’ can’t be canceled right away, because they all mean different things. This is now my favourite unit.
Other bizarre combinations of units mentioned by commenters: thermal effusivity is measured in J/(m^2 K s^(1/2)), a Jansky in radio astronomy is 10^(-26) W/(m^2 Hz), and electrical capacitance is measured in Farads which are kg^(-1) m^(-2) s^4 A^2.
A lot of commenters suggested various imperial units. To me these aren’t cursed in a particularly deep way, since they just involve a conversion factor. I’ll give a special shout-out to acre-feet though.
Some people have questioned why I didn't write nm/√nm as just √nm. It's the same reason we don't write the Hubble constant in Hertz - you lose all information about how it was measured and what it represents.
Other commenters explained that the 2 astronomical units is because the distance between the measurements is twice the distance from the earth to the sun. I know that; I’m jokingly questioning why the definition of the parsec doesn’t have the factor of 2 included.

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  • In my PChem class the instructor made the error of saying he didn't care what energy units we used on a test. He really meant it didn't matter to him whether we used joules or calories, but I took him at his word and turned in my test with all the energies expressed in liter-atmospheres.

    @ptorq@ptorq7 ай бұрын
    • Do you do good on the test?

      @the-pink-hacker@the-pink-hacker6 ай бұрын
    • @@the-pink-hacker Yes, he was a man of his word. He did privately express regret to me for phrasing it that way.

      @ptorq@ptorq6 ай бұрын
    • @@ptorqThat man took one look at your tests and instantly regretted everything

      @kai325d3@kai325d36 ай бұрын
    • OMFG liter-atmospheres has me dying😂😂

      @ryanflynn611@ryanflynn6116 ай бұрын
    • Should've gone all out and done it in tablespoon-torre

      @kvetchenfinks7044@kvetchenfinks70446 ай бұрын
  • I love how it feels like the background music is equally upset about all of this as the narrator

    @robertyang4365@robertyang436510 ай бұрын
    • I believe it to be specially arranged but the musician likes just as much to talk as the vocal host :D

      @ramonbril@ramonbril9 ай бұрын
    • +

      @RainaRamsay@RainaRamsay9 ай бұрын
    • "Background music was me improvising on a piano." The man's a savant and narrates the video with his voice and his fingers

      @RuthlessDutchman@RuthlessDutchman9 ай бұрын
    • Also as loud. Which is annoying. I can't focus of what is said during the video :(

      @v01dv01d@v01dv01d8 ай бұрын
    • @@v01dv01d yeah I thought that too, but the content what worth the watch. 3:30 is what got me turning my volume down and using CC for a better viewing experience. I like how expressive the piano is but not the volume of it in contrast with information is hard to understand already and listening closely is harder when volume isn’t balanced properly.

      @bluestaraquamarine9214@bluestaraquamarine92148 ай бұрын
  • "I personally find square roots cursed" ~Pythagorean Cultist, most likely

    @strawmann9183@strawmann91837 ай бұрын
  • In middle school I wondered why rain was measured in mm instead of something logical like litres/m^2 until it clicked and I realized they are the basically the same unit.

    @jaywu1951@jaywu19514 ай бұрын
    • took me 34 years to figure that out :D

      @MogR91@MogR914 ай бұрын
    • Damn, you just made me realize that..

      @Rabid_Nationalist@Rabid_Nationalist4 ай бұрын
    • daaaaaayummm it also boggled me why rain is measured in mm or inches. It makes sense now that volume/area is just a unit of length. Weird. Thanks for this info that I may never have to use. haha

      @cinchez007@cinchez0074 ай бұрын
    • @@cinchez007ohhh is this how it worked ? I didn’t realise that. Liter by itself didn’t seem like m^2

      @lucianfox@lucianfox4 ай бұрын
    • I thought they kept some kind of measuring jar and measured the height of the water collected in that jar

      @lucianfox@lucianfox4 ай бұрын
  • The hubble constant being simplified to Hertz and then it's inverse ending up as an approximation of the age of the universe absolutely blew my mind.

    @AntonioZL@AntonioZL11 ай бұрын
    • I was so disappointed to learn that the numbers being close to each other is pure coincidence.

      @jeroenritmeester73@jeroenritmeester7311 ай бұрын
    • @@jeroenritmeester73 I'm not so sure it is. The basic reasoning is sound even though it assumes a linear expansion which is a big simplification.

      @mousemaps9168@mousemaps916811 ай бұрын
    • they arent unrelated its an estimate assuming the hubble constant remains the same of when all galaxies were in the same place (the big bang) it just so happens the hubble constant hasnt always been consistant and the speed of the universe expanding has increased

      @user-xg5dw2gm8f@user-xg5dw2gm8f11 ай бұрын
    • It blew my mind so hard that at very that moment I liked, shared and subscribed to this channel

      @user-mt1qi4vd1z@user-mt1qi4vd1z11 ай бұрын
    • I was alone in my apartment I screamed "holy f***" This was phenomenal

      @purpleshaft234@purpleshaft23411 ай бұрын
  • Calculating the Hubble constant as a music note (all notes are just frequencies) gets us an E 67 octaves below middle C.

    @parkerkincaid1031@parkerkincaid10317 ай бұрын
    • Reminds me of the video "a joke about measurement" by Jan Misali, some really cursed units there

      @cheeseplated@cheeseplated3 ай бұрын
    • we are just harmonics, maaan

      @GerinoMorn@GerinoMorn2 ай бұрын
    • @@cheeseplated I forgot about that video, I need to watch it again

      @Cruciblecoder@Cruciblecoder2 ай бұрын
    • I would like to listen to your note, but I suspect that it would be multiple instances of the universe I would have to suffer through in order to assemble enough peaks and valleys in order to reach an assemblance of hearing it.

      @cantileveredapotheosis@cantileveredapotheosisАй бұрын
    • I need to make this an art installation.

      @phillyphakename1255@phillyphakename1255Ай бұрын
  • The little detail of the piano seemingly following a random walk on a whole tone scale while random walks are being discussed is amazing

    @evinism@evinism3 ай бұрын
    • Schoenberg would be proud

      @losthor1zon@losthor1zonАй бұрын
  • I once had a physics problem recommend writing the charge of an electron as "1 electronvolt per volt" in order to help the units cancel nicely. I'll never forget staring at that problem and just thinking, "Huh, well I guess that's technically true"... Now that I'm an astronomy grad student, I see shit like "solar masses per year" and "joules per square centimeter per second per Hz" and it doesn't even seem out of place.

    @JohnDixon@JohnDixon5 ай бұрын
    • As someone with no degree and only an interest in astronomy, solar masses per year doesn't even sound remotely cursed. Am I missing something?

      @A-lik@A-lik3 ай бұрын
    • @@A-likprobably not. It’s just “solar masses” isn’t a unit we use every day 😂

      @christianclark2656@christianclark26563 ай бұрын
    • Gotta convert to something relatable, like the universal news units of school busses( large mass), football fields (intermediate lengths), and aircraft carriers ( real big mass).

      @CatFish107@CatFish1073 ай бұрын
    • @@CatFish107Well, those sound less "relatable" and more "american"...

      @MrShadow1617@MrShadow16172 ай бұрын
    • ​@@MrShadow1617Americans will use anything but the metric system

      @1unar_eclipse@1unar_eclipseАй бұрын
  • I needed to pause for a second when you revealed that the Hubble constant can be measured in Hz. That is truly cursed

    @joostvisser6508@joostvisser650811 ай бұрын
    • It makes sense from Hubble´s law: v = H*r. r has unit meters, so H needs units s^-1 to give v the units m/s.

      @Thetarget1@Thetarget111 ай бұрын
    • the moment i saw inverse seconds i had to pause the video and take a breather. funniest shit ive seen all week

      @kailaine3974@kailaine397411 ай бұрын
    • i mean this is basically the frequency in which the universe expands, similar to how an APR interest rate would work, since %growth is unitless so it’s just 1/time as well

      @sage5296@sage529611 ай бұрын
    • I just assumed that it was the "red shift" offset. Like, the Hubble constant is how much (on average) redder the light from other objects in the universe are compared to their true color.

      @42Mrchadman42@42Mrchadman4211 ай бұрын
    • It made my head hert

      @SpaceSoups@SpaceSoups11 ай бұрын
  • 3:33 "using kWh is like using km.h^-1.min" that's basically what we do by measuring distance using light years

    @noscar3557@noscar3557 Жыл бұрын
    • and in such scale,it do make sense sometime,like when you are calculating electricity bill of a factory,just like measuring distance between stars...

      @user-nh6qi2zu1b@user-nh6qi2zu1b Жыл бұрын
    • Interestingly enough, when we get to proper spaceflight, it would make for more sense to use light speed measurements in general, like 2.2 Light Seconds, especially if we use laser weaponry. You A) get the measurement of a distance. B) you get the delay for how long ago the measurement was made. So in the example of 2.2 Light Seconds, you know they are 2.2 Light Seconds away, you also know that the delay of the measurement is at minimum 2.2s old. If you use laser weaponry, you will also intuitively know that you have to compensate by about 4.4 seconds, as the information is 2.2 seconds old, and if you need to hit it, you need to take into account that you also take around 2.2 seconds to hit. Especially useful for military applications.

      @SioxerNikita@SioxerNikita11 ай бұрын
    • @@SioxerNikita Inevitable transition from metric to planck units incoming in the next millennia?

      @sankang9425@sankang942511 ай бұрын
    • @@sankang9425 Definitely not XD

      @SioxerNikita@SioxerNikita11 ай бұрын
    • @@SioxerNikita yeah then we would have like 9.43 * 10^32 units or something like that

      @agiri891@agiri89111 ай бұрын
  • In my nuclear education (I promise this isnt that boring) we had to do a lot of unit conversion, and to teach us how to do them well we had a sheet of obscure units broken down into their metric derivatives. Basically on that sheet was the "Miner's inch" and it became a meme between the boys because, y'know, yeah... If you were curious, its a measurement of volume/time.

    @CrunchRosey@CrunchRosey6 ай бұрын
    • How much a man can........ If you catch my drift😂

      @thebiggaklipa@thebiggaklipa4 ай бұрын
    • ​@@thebiggaklipa It'd be crazy if it also depended on the mass of what ever caused the 'enlargement' too.

      @retiredmushroom@retiredmushroom4 ай бұрын
    • "I promise this isn't boring"... they say to all of us nerds who just watched a 20 minute math video for humor

      @caseyriley1014@caseyriley10143 ай бұрын
  • The sun appears to move through the sky at a rate of 15 minutes per minute.

    @NevinBR@NevinBRАй бұрын
  • I've seen in the notes of a friend of mine attending a urbanism class the unit "people/dumpster", which was used to measure how many people would be served by a single dumpster in a particular area. The first time I saw it I found it very funny, I read 500 people/dumpster as 500 people crammed into a single dumpster

    @cvl14@cvl149 ай бұрын
    • That is indeed very funny 😂

      @gametimewitharyan6665@gametimewitharyan66659 ай бұрын
    • But wouldn't this just assume that all users of a single dumpster would generate an equal amount of garbage each?

      @Gabsboy123@Gabsboy1239 ай бұрын
    • @@Gabsboy123Considering how many US cities suffer from trash overflow, I would assume that this measurement does _not_ take people who create more trash into account.

      @DustyHoney@DustyHoney9 ай бұрын
    • ​@@Gabsboy123It sounds like an average. For every random person with a dropshipping business putting tons into the trash, there's a vegan committed to making no trash. They balance out eventually, especially if we're talking about a group of 500 people.

      @chaotickreg7024@chaotickreg70248 ай бұрын
    • Person per toilet is even more complicated. There's a whole equation needed, it's also split per gender with up to 2/3 of male toilets being converted to urinals which makes it even more annoying

      @christophernoneya4635@christophernoneya46358 ай бұрын
  • Another great unit for power can be found on energy efficiency labels for light bulbs here in the EU. It's specified in kWh/1000h :D

    @Tandanuu@Tandanuu Жыл бұрын
    • wow by writing it like kWh/kh we can literally reduce it to W

      @rlachiecyce@rlachiecyce11 ай бұрын
    • ​@@rlachiecycethat's probably why they chose that exact one, while also making it obvious for the people used to kWh

      @jan-lukas@jan-lukas11 ай бұрын
    • As a fellow European myself (and to explain the reasoning behind that unit for non-EU people): If you have a lightbulb that will be on for quite a long time (1000h isn't hard to achieve in a year or so if you keep it on for maybe 3h/night) and thus I care about its energy efficiency, but guess what units are on my energy bill... That's right, kWh, so since 1000h is a minimum reasonable lifespan of a bulb, it isn't as dumb as you might think. Of course, we also have W (and at least on this side of Europe where I am from I've mostly seen them advertised as W), but oh well

      @stefanalecu9532@stefanalecu953211 ай бұрын
    • ​@@stefanalecu9532 1 kWh/1000h = 1W

      @unepintade@unepintade11 ай бұрын
    • Watt do you mean?

      @TheMariofan222@TheMariofan22211 ай бұрын
  • I really like how you use music/sound to help the video more. Its not just background noise, it really fits

    @tijn0236@tijn02367 ай бұрын
    • flying over the comments i just thought "Uhm, Music divided by Sound, now thats weird..." until my brain broke out of this spiral of madness.

      @DasIllu@DasIllu7 ай бұрын
    • No. It's really fkn annoying.

      @BibleBlack667@BibleBlack6675 ай бұрын
    • @@BibleBlack667 to each their own

      @vedantsharma6206@vedantsharma62064 ай бұрын
    • @@vedantsharma6206 Indeed

      @BibleBlack667@BibleBlack6674 ай бұрын
  • 5:40 Oh yes! I have taught physical chemistry at the university for quite a while, and dimensional analysis got very important pretty often. Students would divide quantities instead of multiplying, getting completely nonsensical results; but just evaluating the units of everything can reveal the error. I am glad my physics teacher back in high school drummed this into us relentlessly.

    @monkeybusiness673@monkeybusiness6735 ай бұрын
    • It's a great sanity check on any sort of ad hoc calculation from physical measures in daily life. For example, my wife and I live off grid, and we're going to be upgrading our domestic propane system end to end in the coming year. We will have to rethink the consumption rate of our appliances and determine the capacity of lines to supply them. Even before we get to drawing up a consumption budget, it's very helpful to think about the units of measure. Appliances here may be rated in either peak BTU/hour or equivalent Litres/hour, or more rarely kJ/h or Watts, as well as thermal efficiency. Line capacity will be a function of cross section and pressure, also possibly taking length into account. Tankage is rated by either weight or volume. So already there's a comfortable sense that peak L/h can be the common currency in drafting the budget and sizing the lines and regulators and tanks. We haven't cited a single number, and yet we have a good preliminary grasp of what we'll be talking about when we get together with the gas fitter. No doubt there will be some regulatory constraints, the need to work within standard pipe sizes and whatnot, but we have an easy conceptual framework to make sense of all that. It may also be that the trades have a preference for converting directly between particular units. That can seem cryptic at first encounter, but already having a dimensional analysis makes it much easier to follow. In short, it's an extremely valuable form of literacy.

      @starfishsystems@starfishsystems3 ай бұрын
    • This is what I keep telling the second semesters I'm supervising for 2.5 ECTs: Solving this homework is simple: Step 1: Google every formula that might be relevant and note it down Step 2: Figure out how to get from what units you start with to where you want to end up Step 3: Calculate the unit to make sure you don't end up with a hamster whose mass is measured in km²/C Step 4: Calculate the order of magnitude and ask yourself "Does it make sense for this hamster to have a mass of a few 10^36kg?" Step 5 (optional): calculate the numeric value

      @lucykitsune4619@lucykitsune4619Ай бұрын
  • How can the "thin tube of fuel" be so simultaneously cursed and brilliant at the same time?

    @Treblaine@Treblaine9 ай бұрын
    • do you also see all the cars passing by led by their own fuel line now? :D

      @MogR91@MogR914 ай бұрын
    • It's like trolley wires but made out of dinosaur juice lol

      @bobthegamingtaco6073@bobthegamingtaco6073Ай бұрын
    • crossectional consumption rate.

      @avroarchitect1793@avroarchitect1793Ай бұрын
  • My favorite is s^-1 / s^-1, where the units don't actually cancel. (One is a frequency, the other is an _angular_ frequency, and so is off by a factor of 2pi.) In general, anything involving radians is 'fun', because people declare it to be unitless and then omit the unit, and then get really confused.

    @TheLoneWolfling@TheLoneWolfling11 ай бұрын
    • This always annoyed me, because degrees and radians are definitely units, and by declaring their unitlessness, it's easy to get confused when reading about models in papers where you're not familiar with the field's standards as to whether they're talking about radians or degrees. This issue comes up a lot in crystallography modelling, where the angle standard in physics is radians, but in measured X-ray diffraction data, it's degrees, and models either choose one or the other.

      @AimeeColeman@AimeeColeman10 ай бұрын
    • The same happened here with the gravitational constant at 9:30. Google covered it wrong. It went from 1/s to Hertz and multiple the unitless constant "revolution" without stating it. So, converting back to 1/s would introduce the 2pi or 360° factor incorrectly.

      @mreese8764@mreese876410 ай бұрын
    • @@AimeeColeman ° is the symbol for degrees and rad for radians. Isn't it pretty standard to write rad/s for angular velocity?

      @mrWade101@mrWade10110 ай бұрын
    • It's dimensionless, not unitless.

      @user-mv2nn6rw2w@user-mv2nn6rw2w10 ай бұрын
    • @@user-mv2nn6rw2w Indeed!

      @TheLoneWolfling@TheLoneWolfling10 ай бұрын
  • I've watched this video more times than I would probably admit, and "Hertz?!" gets me every time. What a gem of a video.

    @Subcontrabassoon@Subcontrabassoon2 ай бұрын
  • One thing that I always chuckle at is that torque can theoretically be measured in joules.

    @ReySilverskin@ReySilverskin5 ай бұрын
    • I hate you

      @MogR91@MogR914 ай бұрын
    • @@suhasguddeti2375 Except Torque isn't a form of work? Is It? It can't be... "Work" is Energy, It's the result of the action of a force inducing deplacement. The units are the same but the thing they measure isn't. For Work we consider the distance travelled by the object because of the force applied to it, If the object doesn't move It didn't recieve Energy. (unless it deforms or warms up or emit light or wathever ^^') But for Torque, we consider the distance from the force application point to the center of rotation of the object. Torque exists without displacement. you can apply a Torque without spending energy if nothing happens to the object. And this "rotational Inertia" equation is kinda misnamed because it's simply newton's second law F=ma applied to rotation it doesn't measure rotational energy. "Rotational kinetic Energy" does E = 1/2 * I * w^2 but Yes, this again has the same unit, Joules xD @ReySilverskin you truly are evil hahaha I'll keep using N.m for torque

      @MogR91@MogR914 ай бұрын
    • Here’s a proof for those wondering: Torque => F * d => ((kg * m) / s^2) * m => (kg * m^2) / s^2 = Joules. Here’s the proof using the rotational inertia equation: Torque => Ia => (kg * m^2) (rad / s^2) => radians are unit-less so => (kg * m^2) / s^2 = Joules However, even though it’s possible to measure torque in joules, it doesn’t have the same intuition as energy, as torque is just the rotational version of force, which just by chance has the same units as energy, but it shouldn’t be thought of as that.

      @suhasguddeti2375@suhasguddeti23754 ай бұрын
    • @@suhasguddeti2375 Rotation energy is another form of energy, as with kinetic or potential energy etc… For extra fun, rotate or move fast enough that you need the lorenz transforms…

      @Georgewilliamherbert@Georgewilliamherbert4 ай бұрын
    • I mean most of those implication arrows (=>) should just be equal signs. "Implies" or "=>" is used when you have two statements, such as x = y => x+1 = y+1 rather something like 1 => 2-1

      @egwenealvereiscool7726@egwenealvereiscool77264 ай бұрын
  • The musical companionship to the monologue is frickin' amazing. I noticed it early on, but at the random walk, I decided I had to comment on it

    @beriukay@beriukay11 ай бұрын
    • I love it when music does this it's great

      @AstralPhnx@AstralPhnx10 ай бұрын
    • Lol I am looking at the comments for this with the video paused at the random walk moment

      @SmashCrunch@SmashCrunch9 ай бұрын
    • @@SmashCrunch I gotchu, 16:01

      @cxvz5576@cxvz55769 ай бұрын
    • same, this is crazy

      @thatoneofficialpianist@thatoneofficialpianist8 ай бұрын
    • @@thatoneofficialpianist Background music was me improvising on a piano. he said this in the description

      @vvsganti@vvsganti8 ай бұрын
  • The most cursed unit I came across in my physics degree was for the frequency spindown rate of a pulsar, measured in seconds per second (or, every second, how many seconds longer each rotation of the pulsar increases by)

    @Space_Kalak@Space_Kalak10 ай бұрын
    • If the spindown rate of the pulsar was accelerating, you could measure that in seconds per second per second. How many seconds per second slower the pulsar is spinning every second.

      @TotallyDapper@TotallyDapper9 ай бұрын
    • @@TotallyDapper I feel like we could throw "seconds" as an angle measurement in there too, somehow.

      @DuetJay@DuetJay9 ай бұрын
    • @@DuetJaylongitude/latitude seconds are equivalent to arcseconds but measured and represented as seconds, so yes

      @gptgpt-xh7bx@gptgpt-xh7bx7 ай бұрын
    • Janky if you convert it is J/s/m^2/Hz, and so s=1/Hz, it remains only J/m^2. When I did this, my supervisor wasn't happy.

      @Neo-vz8nh@Neo-vz8nh7 ай бұрын
    • Ah the good old Pdot. Dispersion measures for pulsars are another weird one.

      @chrisclark6154@chrisclark61547 ай бұрын
  • I used to work installing optical fiber and not only do the cables have impurities, they also end up being installed in all kinds of crazy ways with a lot of bends which also scatters light. Fiber being as fast and consistent as it is even with all those things working against it is really cool.

    @coolbrotherf127@coolbrotherf1277 ай бұрын
  • Ever since I was a little child I was always fascinated with unit cancellations, but never really deeply thought about it. Well, now I've got this amazing video reccomended to me. Awesome.

    @JanxZ@JanxZ5 ай бұрын
  • A long time ago I used translate documents from English to Spanish. More often than not, they were of a techncial nature. And often I had to review and fix someone else's work. One day I had to review someone else's translation of some very specialized industrial paint. The work also involved converting from customary units to SI. The original instructions indicated the lowest and highest temperatures at which the paint could be applied. And these had been properly converted from Farenheit to Celcius. But there was another important parameter provided by the instructions. For the first 24 hours after applying the paint, the ambient temperature should not fluctuate by more than 20F. This had been duelly converted to -6.7C. So "for the first 24 hours the temperature should not fluctuate by more than -6.7C". Whoever did this did not have a technical mind and did not understant that the 20F referred to a relative change and not an absolute temperature. The correct value was about 11C. The temperature should not fluctuate by more than 11C over the first 24 hour period.

    @victorbarreto8599@victorbarreto85998 ай бұрын
    • This reminds me of the basic issue of people having trouble with things like 30 or 0 degrees F being cold, so what is twice as cold??? But really we compare those to the reference 'room temp' where we are comfortable, not the numerical 0 (and I suspect the relationship is rather nonlinear to boot). So in your problem, they needed to know the difference in temperature from 0-20 degrees F, which meant calculating both and subtracting, or if they understand that this is a scaled difference, all they actually had to do is multiply by 5/9 since C and F differ by a constant ratio, plus an offset.

      @Cerafem@Cerafem7 ай бұрын
    • duly

      @kosmologist@kosmologist7 ай бұрын
    • This confusion would all be solved with kelvin

      @Xnoob545@Xnoob5457 ай бұрын
    • @@Xnoob545 there's no such thing as cold but I can work out what's half as warm. Wow its a bit cold.

      @johncain59@johncain596 ай бұрын
    • @@Xnoob545 Or for Fahrenheiters, Rankine. Why don't people have names like Macquorn Rankine anymore?

      @BillDavies-ej6ye@BillDavies-ej6ye5 ай бұрын
  • The craziest unit I’ve ever worked with is an Erlang, which is equal to 60 minutes per hour. You read that right. It’s used by telecommunications engineers to describe the capacity of trunk phone lines (i.e. between exchanges) to carry multiple voice calls simultaneously. If you group 10 regular phone cables together, it will have a capacity of 10 Erlangs. Long live engineering.

    @skurella@skurella11 ай бұрын
    • I guess you could use it to measure the rate at which time flows in different gravitational fields?

      @EdKolis@EdKolis10 ай бұрын
    • Every 60 seconds a minute passes in Africa

      @B1SQ1T@B1SQ1T10 ай бұрын
    • You could call that a dimensionless number (ratio of spoken time to real time, or (usually average) number of calls at once) if you wanted to. I think there are a lot of numbers like this you could rewrite with "cursed" units for clarity if you wanted to.

      @Mr.Nichan@Mr.Nichan10 ай бұрын
    • So just 1, basically

      @godofmath1039@godofmath103910 ай бұрын
    • @@EdKolis seems possible, but only if you fix the hour to 1 earth hour

      @Noname-py3uu@Noname-py3uu10 ай бұрын
  • My father used to say: "always check the units". It helped me being a bit above average in my physics courses at university. Keeping the units in every step helped me not to be too lost in my own calculations. Your examples are fantastic, thx !

    @302ci1968@302ci19685 ай бұрын
    • One of my best teacher got mad when he realized we weren't taught to think in units when solving equations "It makes it so easy!" he yelled. I've been checking my units all the time since then but gotta admit that getting in the game late can be veeeery confusing like when juggling with angular speed in rad/s... o.O and finding out that basically radians aren't real... or having to prove to myself in a middle of an exam that a Joule is a W/s so a Watt is a kg.m^2/s... Not the most efficient way to solve something I should have prepared instead of playing skyrim

      @MogR91@MogR914 ай бұрын
    • Yep, retain units throughout and always write conversion factors out as longhand fractions like in Randall's example at the beginning. Can't go wrong then. I mean you can, you can always go wrong, but at least it won't be because you didn't write down units.

      @dielaughing73@dielaughing734 ай бұрын
  • My favourite "softcore" cursed unit is the second moment of area, which is often used in engineering and is measured in mm⁴ or cm⁴. When constructing beams or calculating loads I sometimes think "well, technically we already discovered hyperspace" xD

    @technik-lexikon@technik-lexikon7 ай бұрын
    • As a civil engineering student I absolutely love moment of inertia. Such a silly little unit that has so much weight on it

      @sethmcnew1093@sethmcnew10935 ай бұрын
    • “Millimeters Tesseracted” 🤣

      @glytchmeister9856@glytchmeister98564 ай бұрын
    • Sort of like how doing 3D matrix manipulations requires a fourth "dimension" just for the equations to work correctly. That's the multiverse showing the way.

      @Sauvenil@Sauvenil3 ай бұрын
    • Oh good lord, area moments are one if my most hated units, they always seem so damn absurd

      @tiagobelo4965@tiagobelo49653 ай бұрын
    • in ship stability it also plays a big role. you grab the transversal moment and divide it by the underwater volume of the ship. this gives a distance. now you add the height of the center of boyancy and substract the center of gravity. if this value equlas zero, the ship's unstable ​@@sethmcnew1093

      @Mr.JesseR@Mr.JesseR3 ай бұрын
  • I can't remember any cursed units, but I gotta comment on how excellent the piano accompaniment was. The discordant sounds when you mention something confusing, the dramatic build-up as you build up to a conclusion, the sudden stop when you drop a surprising fact! Top-notch.

    @5ucur@5ucur10 ай бұрын
    • it's so bad

      @DevinDTV@DevinDTV7 ай бұрын
    • Don't forget the step up and step down when talking about the chance of the diffraction changing and the piano music being a musical random walk when talking about random walks!

      @deanyona6246@deanyona62467 ай бұрын
    • He didn't even touch the planck equation

      @mustang1912@mustang19127 ай бұрын
    • It definitely adds a great touch, reminds me of how Untitled Goose Game uses its soundtrack

      @xenomaster7263@xenomaster72634 ай бұрын
  • Dimensional analysis kind of saved my butt in high school physics and even some college physics. When you understand unit multiplication, I find it WAY easier to remember equations. Sometimes you can derive unit breakdowns in the exam and get a eureka moment which makes you remember the equation from your studying.

    @BonJoviBeatlesLedZep@BonJoviBeatlesLedZep11 ай бұрын
    • It's insanely helpful. I'm studying physics and I do that all the time.

      @Hendrik_F@Hendrik_F11 ай бұрын
    • I did this in high school physics too. I was in AP calc at the time, so rather than spend time studying, I used calculus on the tests to re-derive the equations from dimensional analysis, because that way I basically only had to remember calculus which I needed to do for my other class anyway.

      @jordanledoux197@jordanledoux19711 ай бұрын
    • Dimensional analysis turns out to be a nontrivial part of our understanding of *quantum field theory*, so this feeling never goes away even at the highest levels of physics :p.

      @linkhyrule5800@linkhyrule580011 ай бұрын
    • Same here, it saved me in a lot of tests cause I couldn't remember the equations so I would just derive the equations based on the units

      @otozm92@otozm9211 ай бұрын
    • In a dynamics test I had forgotten the formula for final velocity given distance and acceleration so I used dimensional analysis to recreate it on the spot. I did however forget the 2.

      @samueljames0908@samueljames090811 ай бұрын
  • I stand by this statement with 100% confidence, this is the best video on KZhead. I can watch it so many times and it never gets old. This needs to be a series…

    @nathanmoore1805@nathanmoore18052 ай бұрын
  • A cursed unit I really like from signals theory is the spectral power density unit, which is W/Hz. It is meant to be like that because it's a power divided by a unit frequency, but when you think about it W = J/s, which means actually W/Hz is just a joule, but written in a fancier way.

    @hermannbarbato@hermannbarbato7 ай бұрын
  • Saying "this video is getting too long" is the KZheadr equivalent of the Teacher saying "That's outside the scope of this course"

    @carrotspace8593@carrotspace859310 ай бұрын
  • The most cursed units I've seen are "Hertz per dioptre". The dioptre comes from optics, measuring the optical power of a lens, and it's equal to an inverse meter. So, Hertz per dioptre is (s^-1) / (m^-1), which is speed if you flip the fraction to eliminate the negative exponents.

    @emmeeemm@emmeeemm10 ай бұрын
    • The speed of what is frequency per optical power measuring? I could conceivably see this unit in a graph that tracks the optical strength of a lens depending on light frequency in Hertz. Diopter is the inverse of the lens’ focal length, so it's focal lengths (of a lens with a certain optical power) per period (of light with a certain frequency) in this context.

      @adiaphoros6842@adiaphoros68425 ай бұрын
    • @@adiaphoros6842 length → width, span; travels → goes, fares, wends

      @alysdexia@alysdexia5 ай бұрын
    • Beer's law similarly has (M^-1)(cm^-1) for the molar absorption coefficient. k in a third order reaction would be (M^-3)(s^-1)

      @charliewright2667@charliewright26675 ай бұрын
    • @@adiaphoros6842 Brace yourself, because this answer might shock you. This is a unit for the speed of ANYTHING with a velocity. (s^-1)/(m^-1) = m/s. "Inverse seconds per inverse meter" equals "meters per second", which is a pretty common general unit of speed in physics.

      @emmeeemm@emmeeemm5 ай бұрын
    • @@emmeeemm It can’t just be anything, since the context of the units needs to be considered. In this case, the context is optics because “(light) frequency” and “optical power” are commonly used units. So, in that context, the speed of what is being measured?

      @adiaphoros6842@adiaphoros68425 ай бұрын
  • This guy is a genius. He explains as good as it gets and meanwhile makes piano music that goes with the feeling of what he is saying. Subscribed.

    @joparicutin@joparicutin2 ай бұрын
  • Urologist here, when I calculate the risk for prostate cancer on a patient, I measure the density of PSA. That number is obtained by dividing the PSA (ng/ml) and the prostate volume (cc or grams). The unit therefore can be expressed is in the unit ng/(ml · g) and that can be simplified into ml^-1 or ng/(ml · cc) which is ng/ml^2 or ng/cm^6

    @shadowmax889@shadowmax8895 ай бұрын
    • Mass per square volume is truly heinous

      @vaderdudenator1@vaderdudenator122 күн бұрын
  • I remember the first time I thought about how strange unit cancellation is was when I learned that you can measure rainfall as either liters/meter², which is basically (0.1 meter)³/meter² or 1/1000ths of a meter, or 1 millimeter. So if you're expecting five millimeters of rain, that's just five liters per square meter of ground it's falling onto. Super obvious in retrospect, but it confused the heck out of me as a kid.

    @LordHonkInc@LordHonkInc11 ай бұрын
    • which incidentally is how you can "easily" measure rainfall: put out a 1m^2 pan outside, and measure how high the water is in the pan at the end of rain. in your example, it would be 5 milimeters. in fact, because of unit cancellation, you can see that any pan would have 5 mm of water on average.

      @Themoonisachees@Themoonisachees11 ай бұрын
    • So thats what that means, i thought they left some sort of rain catcher out and measured how much it filled, which always confused me as to how small of a number it was

      @QueueWithACapitalQ@QueueWithACapitalQ11 ай бұрын
    • ​@@QueueWithACapitalQ That's exactly what you do, but you do not measure how much it fills but how *high*. That way you do not have to specify how big the container is.

      @onecommunistboi@onecommunistboi11 ай бұрын
    • @@Themoonisachees damn. I went and wrote a comment saying that measuring height is container agnostic, only to read the last line when I was done >_> On the other hand, if you don't have a ruler but you have a scale the size of the container matters

      @Daniel-yy3ty@Daniel-yy3ty11 ай бұрын
    • Wow. I never thought about that.

      @eldarliis8788@eldarliis878811 ай бұрын
  • In university, I had some work that was calculated in minutes per hour. We were doing a group project on how many toilets a building needed, estimating the time of a trip to the toilet, estimating the nukber of people in the building and estimating the number of toilet trips per day to try and estimate the amount of minutes of toilet usage per hour. One model had 2650minutes/8hours which became 331.25minutes/hour and then further simplified to 5.5208minutes/minutes.

    @toast99bubbles@toast99bubbles11 ай бұрын
    • incredible lmao

      @tomjackal5708@tomjackal570810 ай бұрын
    • Couldn't you just interpret this as 5.5208% of work time spent on toilet breaks?

      @chemtrailsmoker9852@chemtrailsmoker985210 ай бұрын
    • @@chemtrailsmoker9852 I guess that's one way to interpret it. Although we mostly wamted to work with it to model theideal number of toilets for the building. I think it was something like 1 toilet per 20 people, plus an accessible toilet on every floor.

      @toast99bubbles@toast99bubbles10 ай бұрын
    • @@toast99bubbles im no maths geek but this gave me a good laugh!

      @djaydeved@djaydeved10 ай бұрын
    • Do I interpret correctly, that you do not have enough toilets?

      @mrsimitschge3958@mrsimitschge395810 ай бұрын
  • For me, I encountered my weirdest units during my Bachelor's thesis. I simulated the die wear during hard turning, and the wear rate was given as [ẇ] = µm³/m. It's basically the volume the tool uses due to wear, over the cutting distance the tool was used

    @derhuesgen@derhuesgen7 ай бұрын
    • Does this resulting unit correspond to some area of the surface of the die? Intuitively, I'd expect it to relate to a ring of material that is no longer present after wear, when the die is viewed from the side, but I don't know what kind of numbers you'd end up coming up with and whether that'd make sense.

      @hallucinogender3810@hallucinogender38102 ай бұрын
  • props to the music in this video!!!! It very well ties together the background ambience with the words being spoken. I particularly love the example of the random walk in the section on PMD

    @phoenix4010@phoenix40105 ай бұрын
  • By far my favorite cursed unit in electronics is Ohms per Square. It's used to measure resistance of flat copper planes (such as in a printed circuit board). It turns out the length and width of the square cancel out, so the square is unitless. Any square you draw on a copper plane will have the same constant resistance regardless of size.

    @bitbyt3r@bitbyt3r11 ай бұрын
    • the thickness of the copper is the only remaining variable.

      @jnawk83@jnawk8311 ай бұрын
    • Wait, so that means that you want as few squares as possible, in order to minimize resistance? 🤔

      @MrNicoJac@MrNicoJac11 ай бұрын
    • Are those Parker squares or city squares? :)

      @zoltanposfai3451@zoltanposfai345111 ай бұрын
    • @@MrNicoJac Pretty much, yeah! If you have a long thin trace it'll have higher resistance because you have to draw a bunch of tiny squares in series to cover it. A thicker trace means each square covers more of the distance since both the length and width can expand to fill the wider trace, and thus the overall resistance is lower for the same length of trace.

      @bitbyt3r@bitbyt3r11 ай бұрын
    • Yesss ! Just today I had to redo some of my older experiments for a paper involving a four probe sheet resistance and I was just thinking about what an actual bullshit 'Ω/sq' is, and then this video pops up on my way back ! 😂😂😂

      @ShreyasPethe97@ShreyasPethe9711 ай бұрын
  • There's an XKCD comic with a cursed measurement resulting from unit conversion. The unit is meters and Randall Munroe called it the "Oily House Index (OHI)". He noticed that real estate prices are stated in dollars per area while oil prices are dollars per volume. By cancelling these two units against each other, you get the OHI measured in meters. He then graphed it over time and some economical events even showed up (housing crisis, oil crisis, etc). The "intuitive" representation of the OHI would be: if I sold a piece of real estate and bought crude oil from that exact amount of money, how high could I fill the property with the oil I bought? Its absolutely lovely and the corresponding comic is one of my absolute favorites.

    @Fireworker2K@Fireworker2K11 ай бұрын
    • That's amazing

      @jama211@jama21111 ай бұрын
    • That's comic #2327 for those curious

      @alexm7307@alexm730711 ай бұрын
    • so the constant value of this would be OHIo?

      @unknown_demi6902@unknown_demi690211 ай бұрын
    • You know, that actually makes sense.

      @dannypipewrench533@dannypipewrench53311 ай бұрын
    • You know, that actually makes sense.

      @dannypipewrench533@dannypipewrench53311 ай бұрын
  • Permability coefficient Pm which is: 10^-13(cm^3*STP)(cm)/(cm^2*s*Pa). Ohh and STP is 101,3kPa. The unit is from material science, seen in the book Callister

    @emilgrnlund5747@emilgrnlund57474 ай бұрын
  • Literally exclaimed out loud at some points in the video. Such good delivery, and while being interesting/educational! Keep up the great work!

    @Luka-fj7vi@Luka-fj7vi6 ай бұрын
  • I just love how, when you were talking about random walks, you were also playing a hexatonic random walk on the piano! Great soundtrack, clear explanations, 10/10!

    @Thrustmaster64@Thrustmaster6411 ай бұрын
    • 10/10! is a very low score...

      @MB-yf4lt@MB-yf4lt11 ай бұрын
    • @@MB-yf4lt 100% is low?

      @khandmo@khandmo11 ай бұрын
    • @@khandmo 10 divided by 10 factorial (10!) is 3628800, so 10/10! is about .00000276, or .000276%, which is very low.

      @sams_enfp@sams_enfp11 ай бұрын
    • @@khandmo If i told you your mom is a 1 would you take offense?

      @Sup3rman1c@Sup3rman1c11 ай бұрын
    • ​@@khandmoJoke went over your head

      @wyattstevens8574@wyattstevens85747 ай бұрын
  • As an astronomer I am delighted to see the cursed units of the Hubble constant featured. Also, the 2 AU distance between measurements in January and July is resolved by taking half of the angle between those two measurements. The January and July measurements make an isosceles triangle that you then slice in half to make right triangles. This phenomenon of apparent position change is called parallax!

    @clairekopenhafer8272@clairekopenhafer827211 ай бұрын
    • Since you like cursed units, here is a cursed unit of volume: (Hubble Length*Acre/(Barn ^ 1/2) *(1 gallon)^(1/6)* (1 rod)^(1/2)/(1024)^16) ~ 2 cu in. And you can raise it to the 1/6th and divide by Milliparsecs squared, and pass an Earth Day as a duration to get a different, very fast growing Earth Days per square root ~1.1 in. per Milliparsec squared. A cursed unit you could use for... cooking checking... using solar panels and a goofy hourglass setup. Yeah, units get really cursed if you want them to.

      @hqTheToaster@hqTheToaster10 ай бұрын
    • Whence, parsec: *par*allax distance per arc-*sec*ond

      @nadavslotky@nadavslotky10 ай бұрын
    • Do we account for the fact that we're in an elliptical orbit around the sun? Theoretically, the January/July measurement would be a little different from say a March/September measure.

      @joshuaychung@joshuaychung10 ай бұрын
    • @@joshuaychung Well, I would assume they only take measurements in the months where the earth is 1 AU from the sun. Makes you wonder why AU is a unit when the earth’s distance from the sun is not always the same depending on where it is. The ellipse is probably not that big of a difference.

      @fury_blade9303@fury_blade930310 ай бұрын
    • ​@@fury_blade9303AU is the radius of a perfect circle with the same year length .

      @johndododoe1411@johndododoe141110 ай бұрын
  • I love this video. Your channel is so small yet so damn entertaining. I love how the piano playing emphasizes some moments. It feels so dynamic and makes realisations a lot more vivid. I'm also amazed that I understood almost everything and I love how you guide the viewer into such physical conclusions that are, in fact, much more complex in reality. it's really informative and interesting because one is coming to these conclusions through so simple means such as algebra and converting units, yet so funny through the music, your formulations and your tone and not only visually but also auditively pleasing with all the colors and how the text fluidly morphs and fades. your channels really deserves more attention wow this quality begs the question whether your last name is actually newton lol

    @Lokizypresse_902@Lokizypresse_9027 ай бұрын
  • This video has been on my youtube suggested list for some time and finally I decided to watch it today... YT algorithm was right! Not only I really enjoyed the video but also I realized that I had the same questions and reactions myself about these cursed units. Good work.

    @marope@marope3 ай бұрын
  • in chemistry, pH is the negative logarithm of the concentration of protons in a solution, and concentration is basically the number of particles in a volume. most equations using pH aren't that cursed, but i was never really able to figure out an intuitive way to understand the dimensional analysis of the henderson-hasselbalch equation

    @sheikchilli8670@sheikchilli8670 Жыл бұрын
    • It comes from the fact that strictly speaking, generally the concentrations of protons in a solution is in fact quite low, so of course you're dealing with negative powers of 10 Hence, to make pH a sensible unit, and to reduce the scale in such a way as to be interpretable, you first take the logarithm, but that's a negative number, and you can't HAVE negative scalar units, so you then negate it. If there's enough protons in solution to suggest that there is indeed somehow one mole of loose protons per liter of solution, AKA 1 M, or pH = 0, or there are somehow so few protons per liter of solution that there's one mole of hydroxide ions instead, then the solution is likely so caustic as to be nigh-on uncontrollable without highly specialized and study equipment, thus handily explaining why pH is generally not measured once you go below 1 or go above 14.

      @red5t653@red5t65311 ай бұрын
    • Ultimately, it only really works because 'concentration' can be a dimensionless constant - Number of Protons per Number of Total Particles (mol/mol). The issue is that we measure concentration as mol/L. The only way to make that dimensionless so that the logaritm can log it without issue is to have an implied scaling constant of 1 L/mol on that concentration (instead of pH = -log(a), you have pH = -log(ka), where k = 1 L/mol). If we were to rescale this so that we were measuring concentration as mol/mol (dimensionless), we introduce a new scaling constant is the volume per mole of the solution (pH = -log(kma), where a is now our dimensionless concentration, and b is the mol/L of the solution, while k = 1 L/mol), and so varies based on the solution. Since most acid/base work is done in liquid water, 1 mole of water is 18 grams, which is 18 mL liquid water, so b = 1 mol/0.018L = 55.6 mol/L or so. Rewriting so as to only have one scaling constant, we have pH = -log(na), where a = concentration in moles per mole, and n ~= 55.6 dimensionless, for no real reason except to keep the final answer (also a dimensionless value) consistent with the existing pH scale. In theory, you could redefine pH to not need that constant - the constant factor only serves to shift the final number by about 1.74ish. A 7 pH would end up being a 'pH' (normalized to mol/mol) of 8.74 or so, which is less pretty, I guess. Which variation is 'more right' comes down to which option makes it easier to compare activity in different kinds of solutions (not just water). In this case, mol/L sort of makes sense as a 'how much activity by volume of liquid', but on the other hand, chemistry is done stoichiometrically, so you're more likely to want to know how much 'activity by mole of solution' you have, I would think. On the other other hand, 'activity by volume' is probably more readily accessible to a non-chemist, so is more comprehensible to the layman. So I don't really know.

      @HeavyMetalMouse@HeavyMetalMouse11 ай бұрын
    • pH = - log(mol / L) = log(L) - log(mol) Considering L = 10^-3 m3, we can write: pH = log(10^-3 m3) - log(mol) = log(10^-3) + log(m3) - log(mol), therefore: pH = 3log(m) - log(mol) - 3

      @stratonikisporcia8630@stratonikisporcia863011 ай бұрын
    • the explanation I received is that there is an implicit "unitary concentration 1 mol/litre" inside of the logarithm or something like that. This is to cancel out all units, since logarithms (and trig functions) cant have units in their arguments. Specifically in logarithms and exponentials, it's always a ratio of something against something

      @zokalyx@zokalyx11 ай бұрын
    • Excuse me, the pH wasn't measured by the activity of a component in the solution?

      @StrangyENPP@StrangyENPP11 ай бұрын
  • The music adds a lot of value to the presentation here. It's cool that the topic is interesting enough, but having an inherently emotional component validate the audience's interest in a topic, in particular by matching a reasonable emotional understanding, kept me hooked in. Sort of like helping you suspend your disbelief, but without the disbelief because the thing in itself is science.

    @PeterBarnes2@PeterBarnes2 Жыл бұрын
    • It really feels like an unnamed goose from an unnamed game will come and steal the text on the screen... and maybe a bell

      @KaidenBird@KaidenBird Жыл бұрын
    • Mr. Rogers' Neighborhood

      @vanleeuwenhoek@vanleeuwenhoek Жыл бұрын
    • I thought it was a tad too loud, distracting me from the voice.

      @RomainQ@RomainQ11 ай бұрын
    • what's the piece's name

      @angkhangnguyen5017@angkhangnguyen501711 ай бұрын
    • The random walk section was funny

      @albertnewton8296@albertnewton829611 ай бұрын
  • Love the music in this video, thanks! Also dispersion is a really useful thing to learn, gonna be using that alot more.

    @sapphire--9375@sapphire--93755 ай бұрын
  • The 2 factors in quite simply. Basically, as the base of the triangle doubles, the vertex angle doubles as well. So a parsec is equivalent to the height of a triangle with a base of 2 au and a vertex angle of 2 arcseconds.

    @OptimusPhillip@OptimusPhillip5 ай бұрын
  • Noise (density) of electrical components e.g. operational amplifiers is usually given in nV/sqrt(Hz).That's my all-time favorite.

    @mariohuttel1822@mariohuttel182211 ай бұрын
    • still it quite makes sense.

      @leyasep5919@leyasep591911 ай бұрын
    • Is it similair to the dispersion mensioned in the video? As in how many volts of noise are generated in a certain bandwitch?

      @Ugnaski@Ugnaski11 ай бұрын
    • so... nV√(s)?

      @Simon-ps3oj@Simon-ps3oj11 ай бұрын
    • Hello there fellow EE. I was looking for this one

      @fisk7aal@fisk7aal11 ай бұрын
    • That made me laugh.

      @GegoXaren@GegoXaren11 ай бұрын
  • I once saw (in an old technical report from Oak Ridge National Lab) thermal conductivity written in units of BTU/hr/ft/°R, and I still haven’t recovered.

    @JackBarlowStudios@JackBarlowStudios8 ай бұрын
    • °R?

      @carlosvasquezjr92@carlosvasquezjr922 ай бұрын
    • @@carlosvasquezjr92I presume it's degrees Rankine (Fahrenheit offset so 0°R is absolute zero)

      @cyberneticsquid@cyberneticsquid2 ай бұрын
    • It's actually crazier than that. Thermal conductivity is usually expressed in BTU*in/(hr*ft^2*°F). That is, the number of BTUs that will conduct through a material that is 1 inch thick, 1 foot square, and has a 1°F difference in temperature between the hot and cold side in 1 hour.

      @yablecki@yablecki2 ай бұрын
    • @@yableckiI hate that

      @vaderdudenator1@vaderdudenator122 күн бұрын
    • Actually, both °R and °F are a very colloquial way to write that part of the unit. Technically correct would be R (without the ° symbol), i.e. just Rankine, as that signifies a temperature difference on the Fahrenheit scale (the same way a temperature difference on the Celsius scale would be K, Kelvin, without the ° symbol). °R (with the degree symbol) would be an absolute temperature with its zero point at "absolute zero", the lowest temperature possible. It's the same with the Celsius scale, where °K would be an absolute temperature with its zero point at the lowest temperature possible. And both °F and °C never go without the degree symbol, as they're both absolute temperatures, never temperature differences. (However, with a zero point at a physically silly - but useful in practice and more tangible for human consumption - temperature.)

      @uNiels_Heart@uNiels_Heart22 күн бұрын
  • Can we talk about how the background music matched his speech intensity? That music - content synchronization is amazig! Congrats!!

    @Lellba47@Lellba47Ай бұрын
  • Thanks for including the intuition for why the units cancel like they do. I really enjoyed this video and I’m definitely going to watch more of your stuff.

    @saltysoyman6908@saltysoyman690817 күн бұрын
  • The bit about fuel consumption has an interesting update with the transition to electric cars: The specific energy consumption of an electric car can be given in kWh/km, which translates to 3600 kJ/km = 3600 J/m = 3600 Newtons. And it has a neat interpretation: It's the average force (air resistance, friction etc.) holding your car back over the distance of the trip (some overhead for onboard electronics notwithstanding).

    @screwaccountnames@screwaccountnames11 ай бұрын
    • This explanation feels wrongs. The energy efficiency of a car does not only depend on external losses like air resistance. In fact, air resistiance and frictions can be considered constant, depending on the actual car design and implementation details.

      11 ай бұрын
    • ​​​@ but these resistances change with different driving conditions (speed, headwind, ...). I would also expect electrical and mechanical efficiency to change with variables such as temperature.

      @MarkFobert@MarkFobert11 ай бұрын
    • @ That's why it is not an explanation but rather an interpretation: Assuming that all losses were created by air resistance then it would have the exact force of your energy consumption.

      @MrHankeyYT@MrHankeyYT11 ай бұрын
    • @@MrHankeyYT I think it's a valid explanation too. Those newtons are the total forces the engine needs to overcome, including air resistance, wheel friction, and also internal resistance of the engine itself.

      @juanausensi499@juanausensi49911 ай бұрын
    • At that point it's just an aerodynamics value.

      @MaxwellTornado@MaxwellTornado11 ай бұрын
  • Unlike SI, CGS does not have a separate unit for charge. Instead it has the statcoulomb, a derived unit equal to 1 sqrt(g cm^3)/s. To add to the cursedness, it's not dimensionally consistent with the coulomb. The conversion factor depends on the context of the quantity it's measuring.

    @petrie911@petrie911 Жыл бұрын
    • CGS is an entire cursed unit system in the first place

      @mibber121@mibber12111 ай бұрын
    • Better than having to use vacuum permittivity and permeability constants. Makes dimensional analysis a whole lot easier. Hardly any reason to ever convert charge itself, anyway, and CGS is consistent with SI on stuff like Energy.

      @TimothyRE99@TimothyRE9911 ай бұрын
    • @@TimothyRE99 That's like saying working with g the gravitational field strength is tedious. Constants in physics having units is nothing new.

      @Saturnius@Saturnius11 ай бұрын
    • I remember too many problems where cgs helped cut through the tangle and clarify the problem to think it’s completely useless. That said, the statcoulomb is pretty cursed.

      @thekonkoe@thekonkoe11 ай бұрын
    • @@Saturnius But why use an extra constant when you don't need to? There's a reason natural and Planck units exist.

      @TimothyRE99@TimothyRE9911 ай бұрын
  • This video un-cursed (blessed) the square root units with an intuitive understanding. Thank you!

    @wleizero@wleizero13 күн бұрын
  • Unfortunately there’s not many people appreciating how ridiculous the unit for pulsar scintillation is, good for pointing it out

    @Thunder_Tracks@Thunder_Tracks7 ай бұрын
  • Finally, an outlet for the weirdest unit I came across in college. Sheet resistance, the measurement of electrical resistance of thin films of uniform thickness, uses a unit that is so cursed it has stuck with me for nearly a decade at this point, that being "ohms per square". This unit is referred to as such because, while bulk resistivity is measured in ohm*meters, which is actually stated as ohm*m^2/m (ohm*area/length), you then ALSO divide it by its sheet thickness, giving you straight ohms again. However, to designate the maddening process you've been through, it is designated as "ohms per square". Link here for more reading: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sheet_resistance

    @Epicman227@Epicman22710 ай бұрын
    • I'm doing PEM fuel cell research and this unit was pissing me off to no end until I finally figured out wtf it means...

      @shehranazim4784@shehranazim47847 ай бұрын
    • I LOOKED AND IT'S AN ACTUAL SQUARE LMAO

      @apinkchameleon@apinkchameleon6 ай бұрын
    • Holy fuck there's Ω/ロ notation for it. (The square I used here is a Japanese letter I cba looking up a square symbol)

      @Murks33@Murks336 ай бұрын
    • Electrical/electronic engineers are masters of using cursed units to designate stuff, at this point I've abandoned any hopes of ever doing a proper dimensional analysis and just look at the formula long enough until I'm convinced the units _probably_ line up lmao

      @rubenbohorquez5673@rubenbohorquez56736 ай бұрын
    • you have the same in the resistance of heat of materials, isntead of metres. its hard really hard but the same

      @MrTiti@MrTiti5 ай бұрын
  • Can we appreciate the music in this video? Like, I've genuinely never seen someone have reactive, living music that plays with and compliments the video, rather than a few standard, unchanging backing tracks. It's so creative, I love it!

    @stickmanonastick6089@stickmanonastick608911 ай бұрын
    • I absolutely love it aswell. Wonderfully done.

      @kasperlindberg179@kasperlindberg17911 ай бұрын
    • Yeah I noticed that too

      @mihailmilev9909@mihailmilev990911 ай бұрын
    • ​@@kasperlindberg179same

      @mihailmilev9909@mihailmilev990911 ай бұрын
    • 106th like 1d ago

      @mihailmilev9909@mihailmilev990911 ай бұрын
    • ​@@kasperlindberg1791st like. Also hi from 3 hours ago lol. I was probably still playing chess with a librarian.

      @mihailmilev9909@mihailmilev990911 ай бұрын
  • You explained a lot of concepts very well, good stuff.

    @dasauce600@dasauce600Ай бұрын
  • Love the piano in the back to help convey idea's and emotion.

    @327efrain@327efrain5 ай бұрын
  • A rule of thumb in surveying is that the elevation of a horizontal line of sight changes by 8 inches per mile-squared. This turns out to be the reciprocal of the diameter of Earth.

    @hadz8671@hadz867111 ай бұрын
    • Oh I know that unit from back when I used to look at flat earth videos for fun lmao

      @flerfbuster7993@flerfbuster799311 ай бұрын
    • The elevation drop is pretty much "the same number" in SI, for once(!), namely ≈ 8 cm/km². That's because, in the spirit of this video, (1 mi² × cm)/(1 km² × inch) = 1.02 ≈ 1, dimensionless.

      @sternmg@sternmg11 ай бұрын
    • @@sternmgThat’s an amazing coincidence!

      @xenontesla122@xenontesla12211 ай бұрын
    • @@flerfbuster7993 Is that where they get that from? Flat Earth is the only context I have ever heard that.

      @KeithBoehler@KeithBoehler11 ай бұрын
    • Matt Parker did a video on that and he obtained the same number

      @swaree@swaree11 ай бұрын
  • My AP physics teacher once told us a story about how one student would always write his test answers with ridiculous units just to make our teacher check the conversions to make sure he got it right. After beginning E&M and encountering the unit of "Ohm" for the first time, and him telling us "1/Ohm" was allowed to be written as "Mho", I got inspired to do something stupid just for fun. Long story short, after consulting the year's worth of notes to find the right connections, I found that all units can be written in terms of "Mho", with my favorite example being meters. c^2s/KgMhom=m, or Coulumbs squared seconds per Kilogram Mho Meter is equal to meters. The part about this both my friends and teacher thought was the most cursed, was the fact that meters appears its own definition of itself, which is just plain stupid.

    @crazyfunguy2107@crazyfunguy210711 ай бұрын
    • I never had a student do that, but my solution would be to call the student to my desk and have him explain what his unit meant and why he used it.

      @wayneyadams@wayneyadams10 ай бұрын
    • 1/Ohm is Siemens... But I like Mho better.

      @gideonz74b@gideonz74b9 ай бұрын
    • I. e. c²s/kgMho = m², i. e. m = c sqrt(s/kgMho). So you can actually avoid that the meter appears on both sides.

      @bjornfeuerbacher5514@bjornfeuerbacher55149 ай бұрын
    • Nowadays the "mho" is known as the siemens.

      @denelson83@denelson839 ай бұрын
    • Let's be completely honest. Meter IS derivative of itself, which was tied to physical world occurrences to have ability of consistently reproducing value within laws of our universe. Any measurement value is such, because it relied on people defining it in the first place and there were no good ways to create absolute measurements back then. And, as meter is one of the key values, as everything can be tied to meter, it is reasonable to assume you can actually derive meter or second from combinations of basically any existing metric values as well.

      @DimkaTsv@DimkaTsv9 ай бұрын
  • you should make more content like this, i’ve watched this video many times just because there’s nothing else as fun as it on youtube

    @abrahamo2895@abrahamo28957 ай бұрын
  • I'd love a part 2 honestly, this video's great.

    @Qaos@Qaos5 ай бұрын
  • I really love how the piano music follows the story! It adds so much!

    @danielhidefjall5060@danielhidefjall506011 ай бұрын
    • YES!

      @WindowsOnWindows@WindowsOnWindows11 ай бұрын
    • Can’t believe it’s improvised

      @dramaticdrummer0397@dramaticdrummer039711 ай бұрын
    • It really is an incredible feature

      @TripleGatan@TripleGatan11 ай бұрын
    • Wanted to say this too incredibly well done!

      @adrianbrandheini319@adrianbrandheini31911 ай бұрын
  • POV: You are solving a physics problem and see GPa for the first time as a unit of tension

    @norgard7518@norgard751811 ай бұрын
    • I hate that I understand this joke.

      @comparatorclock@comparatorclock11 ай бұрын
    • Pascal as a tension unit? What?

      @seesaw41@seesaw4111 ай бұрын
    • Funny, in engineering I encountered GPa as a unit of stress 🙃

      @harrygenderson6847@harrygenderson684711 ай бұрын
    • ​@@harrygenderson6847 man, thinking of my studies in engineering is putting me under 4.20 GPa

      @Blackspidy619@Blackspidy61911 ай бұрын
    • @@seesaw41 A tensile stress unit. Usually it is MPa for stress, and GPa for Young's modulus, since that's the order of magnitude we generally expect for these concepts.

      @carultch@carultch11 ай бұрын
  • Great channel! 3B1B vibes. Really cool improvisation, man. Hugely underappreciated, I'm sure.

    @osmeridium@osmeridiumАй бұрын
  • I loved the atonal song on the background, very on point!

    @rossetto23@rossetto237 ай бұрын
  • If you could only remember one thing from high school physics, it should be dimensional analysis. It's gonna be useful for the rest of your life.

    @mario7501@mario750111 ай бұрын
    • So many little problems in life can be solved with a dimensional analysis exercise in like 10seconds. But when you do that people think you’re a god damn wizard or something

      @tytrater2136@tytrater21368 ай бұрын
    • yeah we never had that. Maybe that's why I like learning about this stuff, because I hated most everything else in school and this didn't get ruined

      @ggkol8745@ggkol87457 ай бұрын
    • facts

      @V-for-Vendetta01@V-for-Vendetta017 ай бұрын
    • The best use of dimensional analysis imo is to find out that you modeling the whole thing wrong, especially when working with imperial vs SI distances raised to powers, etc.

      @Cerafem@Cerafem7 ай бұрын
    • My highschool physics and chem teachers 100% drilled dimensional analysis into our heads. I'm pretty sure they colluded on that fact. Also, for AP chem, the teacher would randomly ask students question about ions if he saw you in the hall and tally the total right/wrong answers to buff or nerf his curve for the final exam 🤣. People took it very seriously as his class was super hard.

      @Big_Red1@Big_Red16 ай бұрын
  • After our physics teacher taught us about dimensional analysis in school, I never had to remember all these many complicated formulas again. It felt like enlightenment! I only remembered some basic formulas (F=m*a etc.) and in every test I simply derived the more complicated formulas again. It made everything so much easier!

    @Darkstar2342@Darkstar234211 ай бұрын
    • same. i just follow the units

      @marmaladetoast2431@marmaladetoast243111 ай бұрын
    • This is what I teach to my students! Stop memorizing and just practice dimensional analysis until you're confident with it. It'll help you actually understand the relationships between the values.

      @RyanBrockey@RyanBrockey11 ай бұрын
    • @@marmaladetoast2431 me too. Although I sometimes forget dimensionless factors like 1/2 or 2Pi...

      @andreaspeters8602@andreaspeters860211 ай бұрын
    • My friend in college forgot ohms law during an electronics test. He used a few of our phisics 2 formulas to derive it. I still don't know if he was right or just got lucky, the prof wrote a bunch of question marks then circled ohms law on the formula sheet. (Yes he was being completely dumb)

      @nicholasreale7998@nicholasreale799811 ай бұрын
    • @@nicholasreale7998 * physics

      @NotGarbageLoops@NotGarbageLoops11 ай бұрын
  • this was absolutely beautiful. thank you

    @lvciferkaminski@lvciferkaminski5 ай бұрын
  • This is still one of my favorite videos on youtube!

    @danielhidefjall5060@danielhidefjall50605 ай бұрын
  • the most cursed units for me are inverse centimeters, which are used for a sort of frequency because they're the inverse of the wavelength, but they're called wavenumbers and have a factor of 2pi thrown in, and they're also used for energy because you can convert a wavenumber of light to an energy in joules or eV pretty easily, and then physical chemists get excited and start just doing literally every single unit in inverse centimeters

    @ianbaram3043@ianbaram304311 ай бұрын
    • Spectroscopists are a plague. I had to recall that RT thermal energy was roughly 200 cm-1 and that it corresponded to the much nicer 25 meV to remember the "conversion"

      @kantinbluck@kantinbluck11 ай бұрын
    • I wholeheartedly agree. Inverse centimeters are absolutely terrible. Luckily for me, nm is the standard for the near-IR so we get to work with beauties

      @kzalesak4@kzalesak410 ай бұрын
    • and it is a _named_ unit. 1 cm^-1 is a kaiser. Visible is from 13 kilokaisers to 26 kilokaisers. Just think of 10kK as an inverse micron...

      @jeffreysoreff9588@jeffreysoreff958810 ай бұрын
  • For my cursed unit I'm gonna go with a plain old meter... USED FOR TENSILE STRENGTH OF A MATERIAL. I don't remember the exact equation, but basically it answears the question of "how many meters of a wire made form a specific material would it take to deform plastically under it's own weight". It's quite nice for aerospace science and other science branches where weight is important, because it combines strength properties with density of a material.

    @wwiwwin@wwiwwin11 ай бұрын
    • Strain = Change in length / length. Thanks A-Level Physics for ruining my life.

      @pushatsinfrared@pushatsinfrared11 ай бұрын
    • In every engineering setting I’ve encountered, we’ve used the Young’s Modulus, aka modulus of elasticity which is in units of stress, ie GPa or psi

      @Jaymac720@Jaymac72011 ай бұрын
    • ​@@pushatsinfrared strain is a dimensionless unit?

      @nanamacapagal8342@nanamacapagal834211 ай бұрын
    • ​@@nanamacapagal8342 Yes, it is.

      @iowasovereign2237@iowasovereign223711 ай бұрын
    • @@nanamacapagal8342 Yes

      @pushatsinfrared@pushatsinfrared11 ай бұрын
  • That was SUCH a well-put-together presentation in all ways! My favorite cursed unit is Specific impulse, Isp. Essentially a whole bunch of units get cancelled out until the final dimension is 'seconds'. That's it 'seconds'. Super unintuitive. Sometimes its better to NOT cancel everything out...

    @SF-fb6lv@SF-fb6lv2 ай бұрын
  • Very impressive music/editing: Bravo! Units of c derived from Maxwell's eqns would be a fun one...

    @PhilFogle@PhilFogle6 ай бұрын
  • my math teacher once said: "science is just guessing, just really really smart guessing". and its the most funny, yet accurate thing ive ever heard from any teacher

    @radioaktivman8661@radioaktivman86617 ай бұрын
    • You got half right. Guessing is the hypothisis. Proving it is science.

      @bipl8989@bipl89896 ай бұрын
    • @@bipl8989 You got it wrong. Doing stupid shit is stupid shit. Once you start writing it down it becomes science. Simple.

      @arcuz7862@arcuz78626 ай бұрын
    • @@bipl8989 Half right (so maybe we are down to quarter right now?) Yes smart^2 Guessing is the hypothesis, Science is proving it wrong, and Confidence in the hypothesis increases the more times competent people fail to prove it wrong. Only in mathematics can we prove the hypothesis (aka assertion/conjecture) is correct.

      @user-xh9pt8zu2l@user-xh9pt8zu2l5 ай бұрын
    • ​@user-xh9pt8zu2l No, the original commenter is correct. You see nothing can really be proved regarding the really world since there is always some uncertainty in the accuracy of our observations. Therefore science isn't about proving things exactly, just finding patterns that match reality very well. You can see this in how new developments in science often overwrite previous theories, such as newtonian mechanics vs gr

      @egwenealvereiscool7726@egwenealvereiscool77264 ай бұрын
    • @@bipl8989 You can't prove anything in science, only disprove

      @viliml2763@viliml27634 ай бұрын
  • megaJansky per Steradian (10^-26W/m^2/Hz/sr) is a particularly cursed one I found while working on a power radiometer for radio astronomy. A jansky corresponds to the power per telescope dish area per hertz (flux density) and steradians the observed circular arc of the sky (rads^2)

    @murica7096@murica709611 ай бұрын
    • That does seem pretty Jansky

      @thenickstrikebetter@thenickstrikebetter11 ай бұрын
    • None of these words sound real lmfao 😂

      @StratoSound@StratoSound11 ай бұрын
    • That’s the new Final Fantasy end boss’ final form.

      @OnboardG1@OnboardG111 ай бұрын
    • I had forgotten about the Jansky 💀

      @Smonserratm@Smonserratm11 ай бұрын
    • "it's a perfectly cromulent word"

      @theupson@theupson11 ай бұрын
  • Just learned about brownian motion and its quadratic variation. Definitely has similar properties to PMD.

    @pandufier@pandufier5 ай бұрын
  • Wow, this video is both mind blowing and amazingly entertaining. The mood of the music you use matches perfectly with the moment of the video. I’m glad you or your editor took the time to match the music to the moment, it emphasises your emotion and makes the listener really *feel* the video. Another thing I loved was matching the music to the topic/maths (e.g. the music in the ‘random walk’ part when talking about dispersion in fibre optic cables). Truly a great video, I’m definitely going to be looking at some of the other videos on this channel!

    @jamaicanfootfungus1204@jamaicanfootfungus12046 ай бұрын
  • My parents had to ask what comedy show I was watching when I kept laughing and wheezing at this video. The silence pause after you introduce each cursed unit is phenomenal, it's like you have to stop for a few seconds to massage your temples and be like 'ugh this again' before continuing. Instantly liked and subbed, I need more of this.

    @LMD100797@LMD10079711 ай бұрын
    • I think the music is also a big part in it. It fits every moment very well and amplifies the comedic value

      @mikez1328@mikez132811 ай бұрын
    • Unfortunately, too many people mistake this video for a serious science video. I'm giving him the benefit of the doubt in assuming he meant it to be humorous, because it is certainly not serious science.

      @wayneyadams@wayneyadams10 ай бұрын
  • As someone who majored in both engineering and piano as an undergrad, I absolutely love this backing track!

    @BalladeN4@BalladeN411 ай бұрын
  • As a science enthusiast who is also a musician, you win all the brownie points for the fantastic and very well timed incidental piano soundtrack!

    @KoraOSRS@KoraOSRS22 күн бұрын
  • Absolutely love the music design in this video

    @gamefan1353@gamefan13537 ай бұрын
  • "Volts per square root hertz" often pops up in audio amplifier specs. My understanding is that this is fairly common when dealing with power distributions. Same thing for shock and vibe testing where power spectral densities are specified in units of G^2/Hz as a function of Hz.

    @gizmoguyar@gizmoguyar11 ай бұрын
    • That unit is often used to work with thermal noise, so what I get from it is that sqrt(unit) is expected to show up whenever dealing with probabilities (such as noise or random walk in the video)

      @alonewanderer4697@alonewanderer469711 ай бұрын
    • You beat me to it. Another cursed unit in the audio world is decibel. I mean think about it, it is a ratio so no unit isn't actually needed and we always use it in its deci(1/10th) form no matter the context; it is even common to see mdB used which is like saying microcentimeter. To make things worse, it is also common to reference off standards that are just assumed and not always agreed on. So in an audio system, you might have amp gain measured in db(log scaled input voltage/output voltage) feeding into a speaker which produces db/V(but in this case, db is the log scaled ratio of volume vs a standard sound[20 micropascals]) as well as a signal-to-nose-ratio(SNR) which is also measured in dB(log scaled signal/noise). It wouldn't be so cursed if people didn't insist on using dB as both a method of comparison(what it mathematically is) and a unit(by comparing against unofficial standards).

      @Amir_404@Amir_40411 ай бұрын
    • ​@@Amir_404 I want to measure using the unit bel now

      @thecodeking91@thecodeking9111 ай бұрын
    • ​@@thecodeking91 ah, bells are a unit of house buying currency in Animal Crossing

      @pairofrooks@pairofrooks11 ай бұрын
  • The way you use music in this video (and I presume, in your other videos too) is perfect. Music is often used and made with a sort of standalone role, as if the whole purpose of it is to just listen to it. Sure, in movies, games, theatres and a lot of other form of art it plays a role of enchancing the emotion, but so rarely it is used in learning processes for that purpose. Using it like you did here is precisely what we often overlook in how we learn things. And it is crucial that you didn't just use some off the shelf piece but actually made it like a soundtrack for this particular video. This is just great and I appreciate it very much.

    @ShamelessDuck@ShamelessDuck11 ай бұрын
    • Especially when it got to the random walk bit and the music turned into stepwise staccato notes! It was all so good

      @benjamindesjarlais5713@benjamindesjarlais571311 ай бұрын
    • Yeah, how did he do that? Is he a pianist in addition to being an engineer.

      @cblrtopas@cblrtopas11 ай бұрын
    • I personally found it extremely distracting and pretty annoying. It's cool and all, but imo this is the kind of content I want to be focusing on the presenting material , and the music is consistently pulling me away from that (as I'm a musician so I'm subconsciously analysing it as it goes along, and each time it changes (which happens when the info is changing in this vid especially), my mind goes to that for a couple seconds; I have to either fight that impulse or rewind the video a lot as a result...).

      @99jdave99@99jdave9911 ай бұрын
    • @@99jdave99 to each their own, I guess. As you are a professional musician and automatically focus on music more then the main content of the video I'd say it's more of a compulsion than a normal way to perceive such stuff. Some people of different professions can't de-focus from their field when they find it's footprints in other types of content, or when someone talks about something completely different. Don't take offense, I truly mean nothing bad, but there are a certain type of scientists, that can't help but tell you why and how some piece of science fiction is not realistic, and how they should've made it differently, as if they cannot enjoy sci-fi without constantly thinking about their work. It either means you are extremely passionate about your stuff, which is good and you'd most likely be able to give it more of your time than others, or there is a problem in how you view your profession. I don't know if it is a term in English, but in Russian we say it's a "professional deformation". And to be professionally deformed is to carry over some traits and particular views on things that are useful and ubiquitous in your field into other spheres of your life, where those traits are usually problematic to you or your surroundings.

      @ShamelessDuck@ShamelessDuck11 ай бұрын
  • I really love how well the music is implement

    @laurivirtanen8636@laurivirtanen86367 ай бұрын
  • damn Kilowatt-hour, Gravitational constant, Hubble constant and Polarization Mode Dispersion were fascinating to explore. Also thanks for the book recommendation of What If by Randall Munroe. I will buy it this month after I go back home. Channels like Alan Becker reignited a fire in me for interest in science and I'm thriving by it in the last 2 days. Thanks a lot.

    @Sagardeep_Das@Sagardeep_Das4 ай бұрын
  • Electron-volt really does deserve a spot here.

    @Mew__@Mew__11 ай бұрын
    • Especially as you can convert any unit to eV and eV to any unit. That was proven in the 00s. The immediate result was half the science and engineering students started converting everything to furlongs per fortnight.

      @eekee6034@eekee60347 ай бұрын
    • ​@@eekee6034 what do you mean "any unit"?

      @ExodiumTM@ExodiumTM6 ай бұрын
    • @@ExodiumTM any unit of measurement. grams, metres, kelvin, seconds, metres per second, any others I can't remember just now, and any unit that can be converted into these.

      @eekee6034@eekee60346 ай бұрын
    • @@eekee6034 I searched it and didn't get any relevant results?

      @ExodiumTM@ExodiumTM6 ай бұрын
    • @@ExodiumTM Search results can be pretty bad these days, especially for uncommon knowledge which sounds like commonly known things, if that makes sense. I'm not sure what tips to give. I can't find anything myself today, but I'm too tired to look properly.

      @eekee6034@eekee60346 ай бұрын
  • I like slugs, "A slug is defined as a mass that is accelerated by 1 ft/s2 when a net force of one pound (lbf) is exerted on it." I just remember opening up an old textbook and it talked about how the some 60's jet weighed about 900 slugs and being a little sleep deprived I just burst out laughing on the quietest floor of the library.

    @Morgernstein@Morgernstein11 ай бұрын
    • Isn't a slug a generalization of g?

      @darioabbece3948@darioabbece394811 ай бұрын
    • No. A slug is the imperial unit of mass. It is "equivalent" to a kg since they are both units of mass in their respective systems. The pound is technically a unit of force but it's also used as a unit of mass (lbf vs. lbm) since people who work in imperial units tend not to be quite so pedantic. But then again metric people tend to use kg as a unit of force as well as a unit of mass. After all, when is the last time you heard someone give their weight in Newtons? A mass of 1 slug weighs g pounds (32.2 pounds) just like a mass of 1 kg weighs g Newtons (9.81 Newtons) on Earth at sea level.

      @pjl22222@pjl2222211 ай бұрын
    • My favorite unit is horse power hour, but slugs are cool too

      @bp495599@bp49559911 ай бұрын
    • @@pjl22222 People don't measure their weight in Newtons because it changes constantly depending on your velocity and frame of reference. They just say weight when they mean mass. But in certain situations where the distinction matters (eg, climbing) people really do measure their actual moment to moment weight in a system in N and kN.

      @Barnaclebeard@Barnaclebeard11 ай бұрын
    • @@Barnaclebeard Unless you're leaving the surface of the Earth your weight isn't changing more than a miniscule amount that is probably less than the precision of the scale being used to measure it.

      @pjl22222@pjl2222211 ай бұрын
  • Wow. Dimensional analysis is very useful. And well presented. Plus there is a lot of physics explained here.

    @stevestarcke@stevestarcke4 ай бұрын
  • The melody makes a random walk when he talks about the random walk !!! It’s such a great detail !

    @pk_xiv2856@pk_xiv285626 күн бұрын
  • The unit barn (b) which is 10^-28m^2, which is still used as a unit for a cross sectional area of a target, usually used in the creation of new elements where barn came from the phrase "couldn't hit the broad side of a barn"

    @Sigrund@Sigrund11 ай бұрын
    • The more cursed version of this is that particle accelerator data collection is measured in inverse femtobarns

      @L1ama@L1ama11 ай бұрын
    • barn/b is just arn

      @HouseBricksDoor187@HouseBricksDoor18711 ай бұрын
    • there's also a BarnMegaparsec which is a unit of volume. its the volume of a prism with base area of one barn and height of one megaparsec, used to measure the volume of space that a particle of cosmic radiation traverses in its long travels.

      @pr0hobo@pr0hobo10 ай бұрын
    • @@pr0hobo It's about 3.08 milliliters.

      @brennanherring9059@brennanherring905910 ай бұрын
    • physicists sometimes takes jokes a bit too far lmao

      @logion567@logion56710 ай бұрын
  • Weirdest unit I encountered was the Fracture toughness constant, which has [MPa m^0.5] as units

    @legoneurt@legoneurt10 ай бұрын
    • And at the same time [N m^-1.5] which is so cursed when you convert some millimeters to meters for the stress.

      @adriathan1994@adriathan199410 ай бұрын
    • I used to despise the entire field of Fracture Mechanics because of MPa m^0.5… Until I had to start playing with T m^0.5 (Tesla root metres) in my Honours thesis…

      @jonathanatherton9628@jonathanatherton96287 ай бұрын
  • I KNEW you were the one improvising with the piano. I'm also a fellow science nerd with piano background. Birds of a feather flock together

    @mixuaquela123@mixuaquela123Ай бұрын
  • This video scares me and made my christmas eve a shocking reveal of how unaware I am of everything ever. Very good and entertaining!

    @henjoyer@henjoyer4 ай бұрын
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