In this video I took your suggestions and test what happens when I open a bottle of liquid nitrogen under water in a pool! Underwater Drone: bit.ly/2La4fry
When I poured liquid nitrogen on the ocean I got a lot of suggestions to see what would happen if I actually opened it while it was under the water. Watch this amazing video of LN2 in a pool under the water.
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Now the reverse, try to open a bottle of water in a pool of liquid nitrogen
Dont forget to go swimming too lol, btw its 44 Celsius here atm so would be nice right now lol
Epic
Ahaha
PERFECT.
he could try that with the methane on Europa
I don't always play around with highly dangerous volatile liquids, but when I do, I do it barefoot.
@Mustache Merlin What about, you know, Wellington boots?
It just flows right off anyway... better than if it soaked into fabric and stayed there
I don't always perform experiments with highly dangerous volatile liquids, but when I do (0:54), I do it right in front of my bare face and giggle like a schoolgirl.
you dont wear cloth duh, theres still protective gloves, eyewear, pants, shoes, that wouldnt absorb.
N2 is not volatile
Interestingly enough, the specific heat of liquid nitrogen is almost identical to that of liquid water. At roughly 80% of the density. So it can actually change the temperature of the water quite a bit if you could force them to mix somehow.
I was hoping someone would cover the density topic. I was intrigued if nitrogen was heavier or lighter in liquid form. I saw the earlier bit at the start saying there was liquid nitrogen floating on the sea water but that could be because it was landing and boiling away before sinking down so I wasn't sure.
watr is alwayz liquiid
@@yyhhttcccyyhhttccc6694 Ah, pedantic humour. Love it. Water is the name for the liquid state of H2O, so you are perfectly right.
@Shaun Cahill The Liquid Nitrogen is going straight from its boiling temperature to its gaseous form, so specific heat is not really relevant to what's going on here. What is relevant is the heat of vaporization, which isn't very high for Liquid Nitrogen. For this reason, the liquid nitrogen will not cool a large amount of water very much.
@@DANGJOS Thank God someone is thinking. This was a fairly pointless experiment
I only recently found this channel. These experiments are all the things he probably wondered about as a kid, and finally has the means to try. I love it!
experiments involve thought and observation ... as well as reasoning ... NONE of that was here ... this was just a kid playing with liquid nitrogen in a pool so he could get a free underwater drone to film the the boiling off of several hundred dollars of liquid nitrogen with no rhymme or reason behind it than looks ... heck he didnt even mention it was the nitrogen boiling off nor that liquid nitrogen is much colder than water nor that the vapourization point of liquid nitrogen is below 0c making it boil in pool water ... and what frozen out was about 0.1% of chlorine and water mixture of the pool ... which depending on how much Chlorine was in the pool would be known as Mustard gas ... so he even failed to cover his own safety ... but then I guess he knows what his laundry detergent has in it by taste
Note to self, don't watch any videos this ^^^ guy creates. He's so focused on the literal definition of a word that the only punctuation he can use is ellipses.
Boy, movies have really let me down on the effectiveness of liquid nitrogen. If this was a movie, that whole pool would be frozen solid. And what do I get? Not even a little ice cube.
Movies are pure fiction
@@janoyantonio9585 you got 2 tiny chunks of ice...
@@adammcfall5133 where you see it?
@@janoyantonio9585 4:32
@@adammcfall5133 OK I'll look . It still don't freeze water like in the fake movies though
And I thought my neighborhood pool was cold
Robert Green 😂
actually It won't be cold because liq. nitrogen would just vaporize due to heat of water and be released in air soooo.. its just a waste of precious nitrogen
y e s
Robert Green this man swam over the liquid nitrogen
Robert Green do you go to your neighbors pool without permission
I've done this with dry ice and it was a lot of fun. Pretty much the same reaction, although it's a bit more violent with nitrogen of course. Especially in the beginning, that was pretty impressive.
Don't swim in a pool while doing that one though. Very dangerous.
@@hherpdderp may I ask why?
@@carjockey2135 the CO2 sinks, not an issue if you're standing on the ground above it. But you'll suffocate in a pool as it will all hang above the water surface
A bit of dry ice in beer (or other drink) is a nice party trick.
dangerous too @@apveening
Should have measured the temperature of the water before and after.
Considering the volume of water and the fact that the liquid nitrogen boiled of quickly, turned to gas, and rose to the surface it is highly unlikely the temperature change of the whole pool would have been measurable.
@@CarBENbased it's measurable close by, because water doesn't really like to mix with itself even at different temperatures. Temperature of water on opposite border would most likely unchanged.
Teacher: dont do anything with the liquid nitrogen until you have your goggles and gloves on The kids in the back of the class: 3:27
LMAAAAAO
Me : *gets closer to oxygen without gloves and goggles Teacher : *It is.... unacceptable
I know your being funny, but its is more dangerous to use gloves with liquid nitrogen. They will freeze and your hands will get severe burns.
@@raycar1165 I can withstand liquid nitrogen on my arm. But I can not stand alumenem foil on my hand. You are a Boomer
@@insectbite1714 The meek shall inherit the earth ✅ Never been called a boomer before but I did sit towards the front of the class, that's where I learned how to spell, and how to handle LN2. Good luck getting any lab time now that the germophobes have taken over.
Fun fact: It is technically correct to say, "Careful, that liquid nitrogen is boiling hot!"
@@kL07_ "What does the phrase "technically correct mean to you?"
@@kL07_ No, what he said was boiling hot and for your absolute noodle of a brain that means *hot enough to boil*
@@kL07_ whooooosh
@@Reactiontime6000 I didn't understand bro . Please don't be rude . I am just 13 and I love science
@@kL07_ Keep going but what I said was also a *joke*
2:40 when you've held your farts for all day long around friends
“It’s just air bubbles caught in my suit”
Liquid nitrogen: "this is so cool" Water in the bottle: "this is so cool" Scuba drone: "this is so cool" This is so cool.
He has less than a 30 word vocabulary.
You should’ve tried using it as a underwater jet pack!!
No
To Dangerous
Yes!!!
@@carolineconroy5667 were is the danger ???
Cool but kinda uncontrollable. Basically suicide.
Mom, some stranger is making ice cream in our pool!
Teo Grunhut 💀
Phineas and Ferb? Lol
Lol
Teo Grunhut do you have Mathias as your profile pic?
@@anonymouse4921 no that's Harry Kane
I've never seen a grown-ass man get so excited and giddy about science and it's awesome!
I hope that I am like this later in life.
This was done at a party last year. The LN became a gas and was sufficiently cold to make a thin ‘cloud’ layer over the relatively warm water, essentially it was in a rolling boil. Some models jumped into the water. When they surfaced they were fine but after deeply inhaling the dense nitrogen gas they passed out one by one. The panic set in and the last swimmers would hyperventilate to keep afloat however the nitrogen had displaced oxygen at the surface level. The onlookers were slow to react given the worrying nature of the suspended gases and the threat to the swimmers. In similar situations in the past people have died or ended up in comas on account of liquid nitrogen and pools. It’s very dangerous and this video doesn’t reflect this fact
I would think this happen more with dry ice since people trow it into pools to make fog (some youtuber had a mass death at their indor pool when they dropped a load during a party also to defend him he has done it outside so there is no threat of asxypsiation ( or how ever ya spell it :P ) as being outside would be sufficient ventilation to move the gas ( considering the pool had small waves meant wind was present that would blow such small amouts of nitrogen away) also the amout was miniscule in the grand scheme of things
That’s nothing try throwing a chunk of sodium in your pool.
Or magnesium :P
nah potassium
No no no I know what's gonna happen *BOOOOOOOM*
It will burn thats all i know
nah francium
I love how he used the underwater drone to film what’s going on under water, but uses another camera to fill the the drone filming what’s going on. 😂😂😂
I realized that too!
Also underwater
Mhmmm...?
Yeah, would have been really nice to see all of the reaction with the drone lel
Alternate title: how to cool down your pool in less than an hour
- Where’s the kaboom? There was supposed to be an earth-shattering kaboom!
This guy literally invented the cold Jacuzzi
Krazy Crafter I guess that’s called the Jacoolzi then?
Cool-arse nitro jacuzzi.
Coolzzi
@@777anarchist Cool arsecuzzi
C O L J U I C Y
Be careful with liquid nitrogen in a pool. The nitrogen will build up along the surface of the pool and your body will not realize its breathing in mostly nitrogen without oxygen. You can suddenly fall unconscious while swimming.
yeah I was thinking along those lines as well. not as bad as CO2, using dry ice in pools is incredibly dangerous but still not great.
At least with CO2 you will feel the suffocation before it happens and can react, but yeah that is dangerous too.
I usually don't comment on such stupid ideas but this guy is an idiot
@@irishman312 absolutey Rick ...and the worst of it is, he's encouraging other curious minds to do the same!
@@insectbite1714 Excuse me for asking and please forgive me if I'm being impolite or disrespectful. Did the doctors have to amputate that part of your finger?
Great video! Very interesting experiment and excellent overview of the drone as well, those little things are so cool!
Seeing someone standing in the water he's adding liquid nitrogen to, without gloves, goggles, or foot protection, is a kind of anxiety that's new to me.
He could have done it naked, but without googles is a NO GO! With LIN freezing your eyes you not only get terrible pain, but also permanent eye damage. From frosbite will heal, but not blindness. I'm working with this stuff multible time a week and it happend to me multible times that LIN threw itself out a bottle. LIN is not Phosgene, but is still no joke.
So the title should be: "How to make your pool water cool fast for hot days"
How to make an ice cube
Maybe a lil too cold
@@photondebuger45 lol maybe
@@christopherleveck6835 XD
It should make the pool warmer not colder.
can we just accept the fact that he didn't use the slide?
It's more fun to jump
Or the fact that he’s a grown man that held his nose on he way in ?
Lol tho!
Now
Absolutely not
Every news outlet in the world must have this guys obituary 99% complete just ready for the final paragraph on how he finally bites it. That said, he's freaking awesome!
That was awesome. We learned so much about the physics of it and the pronunciation of that awesome word... more of this please, it's so awesome!
I've seen people jump into a pool with their clothes on before but never have I seen someone in a swimming pool with a belt on...
ShadowLight Gaming Your comment is now false.
ShadowLight Gaming , you think he forgot to take his phone out of his pocket?😆
Dr. A you realize any good phone in 2020 is water resistant for like 20 feet
@@braeden90000 any good phone lol. You mean the 4 or 5 models they have that cost $700+ ? I'll just get a $90 phone and not be a retard with it.
Shit, I jumped in a pool with a pair of $200 heavy, steel toe boots, jeans, belt, wallet, I’m just glad it was before cellphones were popular
It's a shame that drone doesn't have a thermal cam on it - would be great to see if the temperature of the pool dropped any.
agreed! that would be cool, also of the air
It would have to, even if you just threw in a bag of ice.
Water has such a high specific heat that I doubt the change in temperature would be significant.
@@wampleek Also, cold water sinks to the bottom and water isn't transparent in IR as far as I remember, so there would be no visible change on the surface in IR. On the flip side, there is a lot of cold gas bursting through the surface, which would obscure it.
The thermal camera would NOT have seen any thermal representation of the event anyway, SINCE Infrared energy doesn't travel through water for any significant distance (unlike visible light).
Thank you so much for sharing this! It’s incredible and the sponsor was really great too! 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Girl1: Did you know that females live longer than man? Girl2: Yeah, it's so strange! Boys:
😂😂
Covid don’t discriminate
@@Stalkergames916 😂😂
Man get short side of stick
So true hahahahah I’ve cheated death so many times it’s not even funny
I still like this guy he would spend so much just for curiosity And exploring and teaching us, good job dude👍👌🙂
Yeah like Grand did before they took his chanel.Still rest in peace Grand.
He doesn't spend a single sent out of his own pocket this is all donated money from gracious supporters
they still do the exact same thing just there isn't grant and he isn't in many videos
@@nikolaipavlov2179 .
@@nikolaipavlov2179 grant seemed to love and live the ideal of his channel and one of his goals seemed to be to make the channel available to those around him so that they could also contribute to that concept in their own way. I had never been a consitent follower of tkor before grant had his unfortunate accident. Im also not a tremedously emotional person. I did watch the tribute episode that his team put out shortly after his death. It was even for me very moving and inspiring as well as indicative of the extremely rare and positive impact that Grant had on the people around him. Its an important reminder to us all that there can be neigh infinite ammounts of inspiration and positivity in even the most seemingly simple, obviousl and banal perspectives of others when they take the time and make the effort to share it with us. Not everything Grant did was profound in and of itself. But it is made so retroactively by his unfaltering drive to show us what he was doing and to encourge others to do that as well. Based on what i saw from the people in the tribute episode, i WOULD say that they DID take his channel from him. But not with the implication that you posit, nay sir, i think rather that Grant had the enviable opportunity rare as it is to stumble upon, recognize, develope, and graciously bequeath his legacy BEFORE he ceased his life processes. They did indeed take his channel... because he GAVE it to them. The didnt steal it from him as it seems you imply but instead they received one of the best of serendipitous gifts, one which allows you to benefit from being a benefit to those around you. Grant wasnt a hero. Though im sure that is a role that many would credit to him based on their experience with him. And that i do not come to argue against. I come only to further it and expand it. Grant was better than a hero. Heroes are important they do things intentionally and specifically when others cannot. They act with knowledge and confidence that they can do what is needed. Grant was more than that and more important. He was someone who accidentally fulfills the heroes role. By virtue of their very essence they are capable of inspiring people to strive for that which is seemingly unattainable. Grant was more important than a hero. He was simply a truly good person. We need more of those people. May he legacy live on.
The heat capacity of water is just too damn high.
It's actually the fusion point of ice that really makes the difference
@mustafa hk It actually depends more on the crystaline structure formed. If you look into ice you can see several different varieties depending on the temperature and pressure each with a different fusion energy requirement. It is indeed related to heat capacity but not entirely
Merik Malhads i think since the nitrogen is cold and the water is a liquid, since they’re both different makings of matter , they’ll shit in each others mouths and that’s why water doesn’t freeze
The efficiency of a bubble to transfer the Liquid Nitrogen out of the dewer through the water with the minimum surface area has to be considered here too.
The highest...to be exact
That liquid N2 volcano just made me laugh so hard 🤣🤣🤣 It literally made my day
Nice experience and that drone is awesome, I've been looking for some time now for something like yours, thanks for the vid.
This channel is becoming a bit like 'The King Of Random' used to be back in the day. KZhead needed this. RIP Grant Thompson
RIP The legend
RIP THE KING
RIP The saviour
And now I am crying thanks
The king was a man. This guy is a wimp with a cringely effeminate voice...
No before and after temperature readings? No calculation on the minimal cooling that would have occurred? No calculation on how much Liquid Nitrogen it would take to freeze the pool? I miss Mythbusters.
Don Bates You wanted science. This is more like stupid human tricks presented by the Kardashians.
Eric Paulsen FR
I would be curious about the before and after temps also ...
Ok, so water has a very high amount of energy it takes to change its temperature. Liquid nitrogen has a much lower amount, so each degree will have a reduced effect on the water. Not knowing the specifics, we're going to need to make some assumptions. For simplicity, i'm going to assume the water is 293 K, 10kL and that the LN2 is 20L and 77K. The pool has something to the effect of 12 BILLION joules of heat energy, while the liquid nitrogen only has 1.2 million. Overall effect of this is that the energy in the pool will be lowered, and the overall temperature of the pool will drop by a fraction of a degree. (~292.97 K) In order to get the whole pool to 0C (273.15K) you would need to add a lot more liquid nitrogen. The difference in energy between water at 293K and 273.15K is about 830 million joules (830,921,000) which to get with the 77K liquid nitrogen would require about 12 thousand litres. Actually turning that water to ice requires EVEN MORE energy than this!
😓
mom: MY KID IS FINE the kid : OKAY! today i would be opening a liquid nitrogen bottle underwater
I love how you low-key show off your awesome pool with this video lol.
Next video, ‘Opening a bottle full of H20 in a pool of water’.
BREAKING NEWS WATER CONTAINS H2O!!!! PEOPLE DIED FROM TOO MUCH!!!
I drink fish air If u can't take a joke don't respond
Even better. "Opening a bottle of dihydrogen monoxide in a pool of H20 and at the same time dumping water in."
You said H20!
That means You will have 20 hydrogens and 1 oxygen what is the point of that
Real Engineering, Veritasium and The Action Lab uploading on the same day. Merry Christmas.
I don't like Veritasium for some reason
@@radadadadee i like veritasium ✌️
IT AINT CHRISTMAS
ash masbud lies
Merry science
Wow. That underwater drone was actually amazing! You should do more videos using that drone to explore cool locations and get really cool shots of things that you couldn't get otherwise. No I don't work for the drone company. LOL
This guy commits to intrusive thoughts but in a science educational version
When he jumped in while the nitrogen was still pumping out, I thought he was gonna die
yeah, reminds me of that one stunt at Jägermeister Pool Party in Leon, Mexico. 1 man in a coma, 8 people KO'd.
When he swam directly over the container, I thought “Chilly dog?”
Why..liquid nitrogen is dangerous while it is liquid because it is cold or if you breath it in too much and fills your lungs, just like with any other gas that is not regular air. When it bubbles out it is not liquid nitrogen anymore but it is sublimating into gaseous nitrogen that is in the atmosphere normally...
@@DreamskyDance well dam, lemme write that down
@Murphy deffa They assumed that it would be dangerous to touch. While he might be in danger if he breathes directly above the pool, he is in fact not going to be breathing it underwater.
4:26 - really good data.
Open the bottle upside down under water to launch a bottle in the air. Then measure the launch. It would be really cool to see a creative launch vessel... lol. Great video man.
you loved pool heaters now get ready for pool chillers
My favorite physics teacher in his natural environment: nitrogen jacuzzi.
I'm working myself with liquid nitrogen, seeing you working without glasses, gloves and barefoot, sends me shivers down my spine! The danger is real, man!!!
@La Fa TLDR; It's not the nitrogen itself, but *how much* is being handled in factories. Because in the quantities used for industrial purposes, liquid nitrogen could freeze off at the very least fingers, or limbs, and potentially die due to freezing. In the video, it's a relatively small amount, so it's not too dangerous, but in industrial quantities, the cats are big enough to drown in, and because there's so much, it's too costly to insulate, so touching or even being in proximity would be cold enough to give you frostbite.
for small quantities like he is working with, it's safer to be naked because any LN2 that you spill on yourself will bounce off due to the leidenfrost effect. If you are wearing clothes, the LN2 can get absorbed by the fabric and stick to you and cause damage. For working with large qualities, I would suspect you might want heavily insulated waterproof (non-absorbent) clothes that seal around the seams.
@@finnrock5558 This is correct normal gloves and clothes will just trap the liquid close to the skin ,I was more worried about hypoxia swimming around in all that nitrogen gas but for the short time he did it’s not too bad. The lungs can detect co2 not a lack of oxygen
@@heyhey1385 oh dang, I wasn't even thinking about hypoxia. Good call.
@@heyhey1385 Hypoxia? In the open outside air you think he's gonna get Hypoxia?
Me: No ice in the pool afterwards The liquid nitrogen: SCIENCE
The underwater drones are fascinating and so cool.
Normal Scientist with liquid nitrogen: I am going to wear thick boots and gloves and safety glasses. Action lab: I swim in it as it explodes.
I don't believe it's real.
I love how he went straight to the point no long speech just a quick chat about his last vid and he began
Me too I respect that this guy gets to the point With the stuff he does he could easily stretch it out for 15 minutes every time, and I couldn't blame him because it takes preparation. But he does get straight to the point I like that
If this gent were offered $1 billion to no longer says, "Woah, that's awesome, this is so cool!" he would NOT become a billionaire.
I was kinda hoping for more freezing but the splashing was cool. Although I find putting a lot of dry ice in the pool gives a cooler effect, way more fog and it sticks to the water surface better
*eruptive white material* "it just keeps coming!"
( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
🌚
AYO
😏
Why does he make the best out of context lines
(3:50) "Oh this is awesome... it just keeps coming ! " That's what she said !!
Yes. A classy person right here folks
The pool cleaner:*becomes burnt Anakin skywalker*
It looks like a mini underwater volcano. Drone is pretty awesome too!!
This may be the first in-video promo I was actually intrigued by. Never knew I wanted an underwater drone until now. Though I don't even need to look at the price to know I can't afford it.
$1,700 US
@@Donald6309 Guess that's not terrible.
for what it's worth, uuvs aren't terribly difficult to build. there's actually a great deal of guides to build them online. reckon it's to do with the fact that most of it can be made of pvc piping
@@AGreySky but I'm pretty sure a big problem with building your own would be making sure it is properly water proof
@@blackwing1362 not terribly, no. mains water is typically around 60 psi or 4 bar, so typical plumbing compounds can handle it easily. that's equivalent to about 140 feet or 40 meters, which is quite deep, all considered, so a homebuilt uuv will likely not go below that. the difficult part would probably be the joint between the body and the cable to the surface, as that won't use standard plumbing parts.
"ok guys, I'm rich as heck"
Why?
@@quackatit Lmao the house obviously
@@RaphpowerSGSUModding Thats a normal house
@@quackatit I mean it's a beautiful one, maybe why he commented this
@@quackatit really depends where the house is.
I found it educational! I think it's like the flashpoint reversed. or leidenfrost effect reversed, there was a cushion of gas insulating the water from the LN2. like how water is cushioned from a hot surface. So, I heard long ago, that there's a flashpoint in both temperature directions, heat flashpoint, thing burn or explode, but something similar happens the other way too. like if you drop animal fat into LN2 or Liquid oxygen, any cryogenic liquid, it will produce an explosive effect. this is something I'd like to actually see too!!
The fact that this video is 3 years old... Before youtube shorts... This guys been underated Way too long
The Gas Be Like : HeLlo. HoW ArE YoU I Am UnDeR Da WoToR. PlS HaLp Me Here ToO MuCh RaInIng UhUhUhUhUh
Here too much raining OoOweweOoO
Lol
kzhead.info/sun/rZpmdruCq5eEf4E/bejne.html
Dattebayo
@@pointythecactus5469 that's my word
"Were going to use the drone to film underwater" Proceeds do show an underwater shot *of the drone, clearly not taken with the drone*
_proceeds to then show the drone's camera right after, but your comment is funny so have a like_
Javier Latorre fair play
Plot twist: he has 2 drones and is filming 1 with the other
The drone is a piece of junk and he didnt want us to know it.
he had multiple cameras and the drone was for underwater shots dumbass
Him: It's still cold water coming out... Waterboy: "now *that's* high quality H2O"
Be interesting to know the water temperature before and after.
"Why do you walk with a limp?" Because I decided to pour liquid nitrogen barefoot
You can get it on you and not have any effects. Just not sustained. Guys poor LN all the time without gloves and get it on themselves when OCing.
When I was a kid I had a wart on my foot that my dad burned off with liquid nitrogen.
That sure needed a thermal camera to give an idea of what was doing on.
Water absorbs infrared, it's opaque. You wouldn't be able to see a thing.
@@andregon4366 Still would be cool if it worked
@@theultimatedragonx I never said otherwise.
@@andregon4366 I know :)
It - 55
I never really cared about having a drone. But that underwater drone has me excited.
Dang I was hoping I found a new way to instantly cool down my pool lol
Thanks for doing this experiment. It's not easy for us to pull this off.
Why I see you everywhere?
@@jadugniko3245 probably because he comments on a lot of the videos that he watches
@@Criticxl69 I think he just watches a lot of KZhead AND comments on all the videos he watches. Most people don't comment on all the videos they watch; that's why it seems like he's using a bot.
@@sleepybraincells oh ok
Yep
haha, I was about to do this with liquid oxygen! Liquid oxygen is denser than LN2 and denser than WATER but it will float on pieces of ice formed.
@Legend of the Stormlord That's a good idea, although I don't think the liquid oxygen will adhere well to ice. The bubbles formed may carry some of the liquid oxygen to the surface though.
@@DANGJOS I produce liquid oxygen myself and experiment with it all the time. It will sink and then rise again, sink, rise. Eventually there will be one or more small concave pieces of ice floating at the top with little pools of LOX inside each one. I have a video on it. So it doesn't actually "adhere", it just forms quickly and carries some of the LOX upward. Once in a while it will completely seal itself in ice and the ice will pop as the boiling gas breaks through.
@@ChristmasEve777 That sounds fascinating! I need to check that out. That doesn't surprise me. The bubbles from the boiling oxygen should cause globules of liquid oxygen to float. I guess it sinks after that and the ice that encases it causes it to overall float. That's definitely interesting. I would love to see liquid carbon dioxide under water as well. Unfortunately, it would have to be deeper than 40 meters in order to work.
@@DANGJOS THAT would be cool too! Well either have the CO2 40 meters deep or inside of a pressurized clear container. Maybe put a chunk of dry ice in water and seal the container. Hopefully, after a while, the dry ice would stop bubbling and start melting. But then you have the risk of an explosion. haha
@@ChristmasEve777 Yes exactly. If you took a large piece of dry ice under the ocean, you wouldn't have to worry about some dangerous explosion since everywhere is high pressure. I would love to see the dry ice melting and boiling at the same time! Unfortunately, the bubbles would probably make that difficult to see. Would still be cool though.
Nice recipe for homemade cold spa!
It would be interesting to see if there is a temperature variation from before the test to after the test.
Neighbors: Oy, Action lab is in his backyard again, time to go to bombshelter, family!
The safety precautions are amazing. So smart to protect eyes, hands & feet when handling liquid nitrogen.
@Ethan Donaldson That's not exactly how it works though. This falls in the educational/science realm & he is dealing with a chemical that can cause bodily harm. It's also something kids are likely to watch. If YT is holding creators responsible (I think $40k fine)for kids watching vids labeled as adult content how do you think it would play out if a kid got hurt trying to recreate this. Although it was sarcastic maybe the creator could also benefit from my comment & save grief later by being responsible with the content. This is obviously not just some dude uploading a vid. Level of quality & presentation indicates he is trying to grow a channel. Science is fun and exciting but also dangerous. If you want to dabble in that content be responsible. I bet if some kid got hurt trying this the guy would feel horrible & how things are today I could see a parent blaming him (possibly successfully) if their child got hurt because the parent didn't understand the level of danger. There is a channel where a 16ish year old kid makes ridiculous contraptions & even he has the sense to disclose things are dangerous. Drop rate of common sense is so low it should be reclassified as legendary.
@Ethan Donaldson Maybe you weren't completely wrong & I should've been less sarcastic. Maybe I was somewhat scolding myself, I've learned many dangers the hard way. 15yrs ago I probably would've done that out of sheer curiosity with the same level of safety.
Got damn, a civil discussion on a comment thread. Love it. That is all 🙂
@@alphafert608 excuse me how tf is a kid gonna get liquid nitrogen? Screw your head on straight bud
Actually in small quantities like this, its safer not to wear a lot of safety equipment.
If you had a dewar that could somehow open up like a clamshell so that the nitrogen would mix suddenly all at once that would be interesting. Also you should have measured the pool water temperature before and after just to see if it made a difference.
"I'll put a link in my degagduaib whehsisb yu can get Your Very own underwater drone"
Can we just take a second to step back and look at that freaking house. I Did NOT know you were that rich. I guess your hard work did pay off. seesh I'm shook
I can't even conceptualize this wealth. I doubt it's from youtube, tbh. If this isn't nebraska or some other state with cheap ass real estate idk wtf o.o I'll never be this wealthy
@@kylezo With 3.22 million current subscribers, sponsors, patrons, and ad revenue, it's very well plausible.
He work as a R&D engineer
It’s nice that he doesn’t brag about it.
That’s called KZhead money
Presenter: "I'm going to swim in a pool that has an arseload of liquid nitrogen bubbling away in the middle of it, what could possibly go wrong?" One. Nap. Later. Presenter: "Oh, so that's what the afterlife is like, I was wondering about that."
Being a Cryogenic technician, I was thinking the same thing. 1 full breath of that and lights out.
The feeling of suffocation is too much CO2, not lack of oxygen. If you breathe inert gas there's no CO2 build-up, so you can lose consciousness and die without noticing anything wrong.
The only way your body can produce CO2 is by taking in O2. So yes, if you we're holding your breath, CO2 would not be dispelled and would starve the body of O2 and give you the suffocating feeling. I have been hit with small amount of N2 in a respirator hose failure in a atmosphere of 18.9% 02 and let me tell you, felt like I was suffocating. I wasn't due to the small amount of 02 I was still taking in and still being able to exhale, but tell you what, still felt like it. The hose developed a very small cut. I think it must have caught it on something and casused the cut. If not for my coworkers getting me away quickly, could have been a bad situation. Luckily it wasn't a pure N2 atmosphere, just an 02 deficient one, so I didn't pass out immediately. Lasted about 10 seconds before I got out of that location and into fresh air. Longest 10 seconds of my life.
It was a rather dangerous thing to do.
@@4hodmt yup, As any scuba diver will confirm, there is no sense of suffocation with inert gases such as N2, only with CO2, so no discomfort or panic, just a sort of drunken buzz then unconsciousness, finally death. At a minor level it is called being 'narced' and happens to all scuba divers at depth to some degree. Nitrogen gas is also how lab animals are normally ethically sacrificed when that is required, as lethal injections often can't be used in lab experiments (especially medical testing, as the drugs screw up the post-mortem analysis. Interestingly it was also a method suggested for US prisoner executions a few years ago as being more humane than current methods.
Awesome seeing the repeated cavitation bubbles
Very cool! Literally! And the newest bar in "Dad Fashion" wearing a belt in the pool :)
What if we pour liquid nitrogen in to lava . If any channel could do this right now will be you.
dead beats mrbeast
It would just bubble of
Because of the intensity of the lavas heat meeting the liquid nitrogen’s intense cold the laden frost effect would come into play a small barrier of gas or vapour would form preventing the nitrogen from making contact and the lava and the nitrogen would just turn into a gas with out doing much to the lava if anything to be fair. If you have an electric oven turn one of the rings to hight heat when it’s fully heated up put some water on it and it will just beed up and disappear into a gas(sorry I can’t speel)
Mr Beast already did it
See What If ( channel ) . Scientifically explained...
If this is an "average" house, i must even lower on the curve than I thought! Good for him though, looks awesome
Dude where I live everyone has a mansion and half the people can't afford it they just want to look rich. Don't worry about your status, you do you boo
Don't live in a major city and land gets cheaper while the houses get bigger.
@@BCRogers619 Where I live, even a small 100 m2 rowhouse will set you back half a million Euros. A house like this one would start at around 3 million. It's nuts.
This house would be 6m+ where I live (Napa). I'm hoping this guy lives in Montana or something because jesus H christ I will never afford a home like that.
Awesom video! I’m more mind blown by you gorgeous house 👍
I enjoyed watching the product demo more than the experiment.
Screw shocking my pool, time to shock my neighbors
So he conducts his experiment, and the analysis is, “That’s so cool!”. That it is, very cool indeed! And his review of the submersible, “That is SO cool!”. Yes it was, I want one!
Yeah he's a punny guy.
Fantastic video
WOOOW , OOOOHHHH , WAAW
Its more throwing an opened bottle of liquid nitrogen underwater than opening an bottle of liquid nitrogen underwater
Puts nuts directly over the experimental plume of nitrogen. Respect.
"Oh, that's cold. That's really cold water coming out of it." Ahhhh, science.
Him: let’s use an underwater drone with a camera Also Him: lets have a camera filming the underwater drone also UNDERWATER😳
A paid promotion may be
@@Martin-bt4et yes it is
When your pool can explode at the first spark of a match
Imagine being a freediver and making a prank taking this bottle under the water then your buddies see the bubbles coming up and first they think "omg he drowned" and few seconds later like "TF his lung capacity!!!"
No one: Action lab: Ok everyone today I'm going to be opening a giant bottle of liquid nitrogen in a pool
Shut up with this shitty meme already.
If you do so, please do it only in an open-air pool. So you won't suffocate.
@@sg-oc8mw nah im good
@@peter_280 lol
He didn't open it up in the water
Next question: Why did I get in the pool with my clothes on?
Because science!!
*major echoing* SCIENCE
cause the water is cold
would the behaviour significantly change due to the lesser input of water and output of LN if the fewer was opened underwater rather than being opened prior?
The scary thing is, if I saw that in a pool I wouldn’t think twice about putting my hands over it