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Engineering with Origami 

Veritasium
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Origami is inspiring a plethora of new engineering designs. Try yourself: ve42.co/Origami
Thanks Audible! Start listening with a 30-day trial and your first audiobook, plus two Audible Originals free when you go to audible.com/veritasium or text veritasium to 500500
Huge thanks to:
Dr. Robert Lang langorigami.com
Prof. Larry Howell www.compliantmechanisms.byu.edu/
On first glance it's surprising that origami -- a centuries old art of folding paper to achieve particular aesthetics -- is applicable to engineering. But upon closer consideration there are a lot of reasons methods developed for paper folding are also applicable to engineering: origami allows you to take a flat sheet of material and convert it to almost any shape only by folding. Plus for large flat structures, origami provides a way of shrinking dimensions while ensuring simply deployment - this is particularly useful for solar arrays in space applications. Furthermore, motions designed to take advantage of the flexibility of paper can also be used to form compliant mechanisms for engineering like the kaleidocycle. Since the principles of origami are scalable, mechanisms can also be dramatically miniaturized.
Some of the work shown is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation and the Air Force Office of Scientific Research under Grant No. EFRI-ODISSEI-1240417. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.
Special thanks to Patreon supporters:
Alfred Wallace, Arjun Chakroborty, Bryan Baker, Chris Vargas, Chuck Lauer Vose, DALE HORNE, Donal Botkin, halyoav, James Knight, Jasper Xin, Joar Wandborg, Kevin Beavers, kkm, Leah Howard, Lyvann Ferrusca, Michael Krugman, Noel Braganza, Pindex, Ron Neal, Sam Lutfi, Stan Presolski, Tige Thorman
Edited by
Jonny Hyman, Isaac Frame, and Derek Muller
Music by
Jonny Hyman

Опубликовано:

 

22 май 2024

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Комментарии : 4,9 тыс.   
@Smonserratm
@Smonserratm 4 года назад
"I made an origami cactus" "What did it cost?" "Everything"
@herrpauk
@herrpauk 4 года назад
Everything?
@JAKOB1977
@JAKOB1977 4 года назад
@@herrpauk He is a water snake, they live 7 years... so yeah everything aka "lifetime"
@IzzyMartinez01
@IzzyMartinez01 4 года назад
@@herrpauk 7 years 😂😂
@jakepearson7403
@jakepearson7403 4 года назад
😂his hands were literally shaking😂
@davidadams2395
@davidadams2395 4 года назад
@@JAKOB1977 Water snake?
@perrywoodman7544
@perrywoodman7544 4 года назад
I've never wanted to touch a cactus more.
@ethanmoore1315
@ethanmoore1315 4 года назад
It's like a normal cactus but with papercuts too.
@TheGreatSteve
@TheGreatSteve 4 года назад
Paige no!
@alphaadhito
@alphaadhito 4 года назад
It'll quench ya..
@drywater3559
@drywater3559 4 года назад
no touchy no touchy
@jamesflanagan6977
@jamesflanagan6977 4 года назад
@@alphaadhito It's the quenchiest
@rajatyadav1952
@rajatyadav1952 3 года назад
Watching this just reminds me, how many really smart people doing their thing without even us being aware........
@JohnDoe-xx7kc
@JohnDoe-xx7kc 2 года назад
it's media's fault. I want these things in my recommendations and explore tab but popular media and yt keep shoving things like the Kardashians to my face
@milanshsharma1267
@milanshsharma1267 2 года назад
@@JohnDoe-xx7kc media shows what ppl want to see
@dazzlemasseur
@dazzlemasseur 2 года назад
Remember all you people you called "nerds" in school? Well guess what ?
@devforfun5618
@devforfun5618 2 года назад
@@milanshsharma1267 not really, they show people what brings profit for anyone that is willing to pay, if any of those companies made origami designs for the general market instead of niche markets everyone one would know about it, because they would pay media to show it
@boltonwood883
@boltonwood883 2 года назад
@@devforfun5618 Very true. Competitive laser tag (Space Marines 5) is wayyyyyy more exciting than football, but not many people watch it so no one sponsors it, so no one sees it.
@F4TA1_3RR0R
@F4TA1_3RR0R 3 года назад
I'm just imagining that one day I'll be able to, in a fit of rage, unfold someone's entire house.
@physicslover4951
@physicslover4951 2 года назад
Imagine you are a teenager and your mom is mad so she just folds up your mobile and comics 😂
@huzaimahjulai7383
@huzaimahjulai7383 2 года назад
A teenager just wants the mom to come into the otherwise can't-you-see-it-says-strictly-no-entry room to help fold the impossible fitted bedsheet
@madkirk7431
@madkirk7431 2 года назад
Oh wow lol
@joshyoung1440
@joshyoung1440 2 года назад
You're describing what's called a "tent." 😂
@joshyoung1440
@joshyoung1440 2 года назад
.@@huzaimahjulai7383 such a teenager deserves and needs to learn how to get that fitted sheet on by themselves so they're not totally fucked when they need their own place to look nice.
@ln5321
@ln5321 4 года назад
"I made this cactus from one sheet of paper in 7 years." "Hm." "This design saved a freight company millions of dollars." "Hm." "Look at this violin guy wiggle his arm." "Fantastic!"
@acranox777
@acranox777 4 года назад
🤦‍♂️😂😂😂
@garrytalaroc
@garrytalaroc 4 года назад
Sounds bs
@excalibirb9204
@excalibirb9204 4 года назад
X Factor in a nutshell
@CuriousTinkering
@CuriousTinkering 4 года назад
Exactly what I thought about his reaction! 😂
@TankYou90
@TankYou90 4 года назад
Hm
@GauravGRocks
@GauravGRocks 4 года назад
Guy: I made an origami human Veritasium: hmm
@Gooberpatrol66
@Gooberpatrol66 4 года назад
Pygmalion
@cranknlesdesires
@cranknlesdesires 4 года назад
Veritasium: Wait is his playing a violin? WHOA!
@ishworshrestha3559
@ishworshrestha3559 4 года назад
Hmm
@km4933
@km4933 Год назад
子どもの頃なんとなく折り紙で遊んできた。 大人になり日本の折り紙の技術はすごいと気づいた。 今も突き詰めて、凄い物を作ってる人はいる。 日本ではおそらく応用する人がいなかった、知らないだけでいるかもしれないけど。 海外の方が日本の折り紙に着目してこんな形で応用して発展させるとは。 折り紙の可能性を感じた。
@SiddheshBagade
@SiddheshBagade 3 года назад
In Derek's defense, he's replying in "hmm's" out of pure astonishment. He's beyond astonished in his mind that he has no room left to make a nice reply.
@Bigfoot_With_Internet_Access
@Bigfoot_With_Internet_Access 4 года назад
Y'all ever just like... Spend 7 years making an origami cactus
@hsvr
@hsvr 4 года назад
Internet Relics why
@dddmemaybe
@dddmemaybe 4 года назад
pretty sure most of that time was spent developing and researching to have the design succeed as an off-job he would do whenever. He didn't literally take 7 years he just never got around to finishing it quickly do to the difficulty, making the challenge inconsistently tackled as is reasonable.
@roderik1990
@roderik1990 4 года назад
Those 7 years were probably working on it off and on, while doing other stuff and projects also.
@ChinnuWoW
@ChinnuWoW 4 года назад
That sounds soooooo boring lol
@jhyland87
@jhyland87 4 года назад
Wait... you're telling me you _don't?_ Weirdo...
@theweirdo6695
@theweirdo6695 4 года назад
1900: you can make a dinosaur with origami 2050: your whole house is origami and comes in a box
@gregorygrigoriadis
@gregorygrigoriadis 4 года назад
With the box beimg the size of a small laptop
@IRMentat
@IRMentat 4 года назад
25,000 subscribers 10 Videos now imagine car and plane designs based on such concepts. Your garage is an envelope with a box you can hot-swap an engine between. Even better if we figure out ultra efficient electric motors as they will scale up/down enormously. Maybe not ideal for heavy use, but the daily commute/shop/school run? Most definitely.
@whitewave6269
@whitewave6269 4 года назад
I think I saw a design for a portable origami style house online years ago. Don't remember if it was just a concept or for $ale. 🌊
@badrecords-6476
@badrecords-6476 4 года назад
2120: Origami Spaceship can now travel in light speed
@rodri_gl
@rodri_gl 4 года назад
...and it can crush you and your family with a button, so of course in response to that by 2060 we are all origami.
@CHITUS
@CHITUS Год назад
Robert Lang absolutely blew me away. His brevity was intense. This guy should be teaching, teaching anything. I never had any high school teacher or university professor even half as engaging as this guy. Just amazing
@user-go9de1xo6m
@user-go9de1xo6m Год назад
小さい頃は何気なく遊んでいた折り紙、大人になって改めて考えてみると紙一枚でさまざまなものを表現出来るってすごいことですね
@tafellappen8551
@tafellappen8551 4 года назад
“7 years” as he puts it back in its box
@michaelzheng3129
@michaelzheng3129 4 года назад
Gotta protect it
@jesusmejia1334
@jesusmejia1334 4 года назад
He bought it that was amazon tape.
@marcochavez9381
@marcochavez9381 4 года назад
@@jesusmejia1334 ahem.. You mean flex tape right?
@fylbrom
@fylbrom 4 года назад
Waste of time
@jomertomale
@jomertomale 4 года назад
@@fylbrom You can now say all of art is a waste of time
@ashurean
@ashurean 4 года назад
"You can't make a compliant mechanism that rotates 360 degrees" "Unfortunately, no one told the paper folders that" *Edit: I just find it really interesting how origami was basically a study of algebraic topology before that was even a concept, constructing complex shapes out of a contiguous plane. Origami is just one of those areas where, because the right material (paper) was available, people were able to skip all the other steps of development and just go straight to the end state.
@joshbrock2663
@joshbrock2663 4 года назад
*looks at ball bearings
@pixelmace1423
@pixelmace1423 4 года назад
Well then how about MY FRIENDS NECK!
@michaelwalsh6276
@michaelwalsh6276 4 года назад
@@pixelmace1423 *snap*
@EvitoCruor
@EvitoCruor 4 года назад
The best bearing is one where there is No contact. Air pressure can act as a bearing too. Won't work for vacuum however.
@timonschneider6290
@timonschneider6290 4 года назад
@@joshbrock2663 Ball bearings have no compliant solid state materials. They are gears.
@gladdy260
@gladdy260 3 года назад
That smallest origami bird you guys showed , i haven't been more amazed in my last 10 years.
@nkszs
@nkszs Год назад
bro what happened 10 years ago
@nu1x
@nu1x 2 месяца назад
Trust me, it's there.
@quidquopro1185
@quidquopro1185 21 день назад
"In all my 10 years, never have seen such pestilence, such disregard, such decay!"
@tphan715
@tphan715 2 года назад
This way was a way cooler video than I thought it would be. Went into it thinking, ok some neat solar arrays and stuff, came out being absolutely mind-blown at just how impossibly practical some of these applications are. All with a bit of folding and a bunch of math. I really think this is one of those videos that you should re-title and thumbnail
@ahtzee9078
@ahtzee9078 4 года назад
Guy: “Nice day today.” Veritasium: “hmm.”
@indigofenrir7236
@indigofenrir7236 4 года назад
Michael: But what is... a "nice day"?
@varunjaihind3904
@varunjaihind3904 4 года назад
My jaw dropped when he said that it was from a single piece of paper and it dropped further when he said that he spent 7 years. Anddd I was blown away when Veritasium said Hmmm.
@ThePiones
@ThePiones 4 года назад
@@varunjaihind3904 Me too. He says so much hum now
@fundemort
@fundemort 4 года назад
Not "hmm" but more like "hegh"
@m.c.v.a.8586
@m.c.v.a.8586 4 года назад
varun jaihind he said “WOW" after Robert told him it took him 7 years
@Tofumang
@Tofumang 4 года назад
Is no one going to talk about how absolutely mind-blowing the cactus origami is
@mr2octavio
@mr2octavio 4 года назад
Well anything that takes 7 years of conscious effort would look mind-blowing
@simontay4851
@simontay4851 4 года назад
Yeah, thats incredible! My mind was blown when he said 7 YEARS! I was thinking weeks or months.
@mr2octavio
@mr2octavio 4 года назад
@@simontay4851 Yeah I was all impressed but thinking, okay here comes the "How long did it take"
@SobelTomas
@SobelTomas 4 года назад
7 years!
@NoOne-ef7yu
@NoOne-ef7yu 4 года назад
I find origami that changes (as seen at 2:45, 8:12, and most importantly 8:32) much more interesting. Although I also *really*, **really** have to admire the dedication, dexterity and endurance that went to create the cactus. Its just... from a personal perspective, the cactus just seem to be a remarkable achievement, whereas the mechanism hint at so much more possibilities of what could be done! Also, I will not hesitate to use this user name for as many bad puns as possible. :-)
@sohamacharya171
@sohamacharya171 3 года назад
Him: you wont use a microscopic flapping bird for anything Me: my goals are beyond your understanding *proceeds to make miniature irl flappy bird
@nu1x
@nu1x 2 месяца назад
Fly my little spies, fly !
@baldiesss
@baldiesss 3 года назад
as a 15 year old artist that loves architect and engineering this is really fascinating
@nosrac95
@nosrac95 2 года назад
Architecture
@Aaron-ru6ld
@Aaron-ru6ld 2 года назад
@@nosrac95 He didnt say he enjoyed english now did he?
@user-xx6pr1te7q
@user-xx6pr1te7q 2 года назад
@@nosrac95 I love an architect too
@taran2910
@taran2910 4 года назад
When you want to be a artist but your parents want you to be an engineer
@coole9639
@coole9639 3 года назад
underrated comment
@ralexcraft990
@ralexcraft990 3 года назад
Why not both
@ralexcraft990
@ralexcraft990 3 года назад
@Ash The Bird ITS CALLED A JOKE
@Sunny-Gupta1
@Sunny-Gupta1 3 года назад
@@whannabi correct
@giygas9305
@giygas9305 3 года назад
Hakk
@phoenix_am3400
@phoenix_am3400 4 года назад
This is how I imagine the future; simple but complex.
@Rainbow_Sword
@Rainbow_Sword 4 года назад
Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication
@bilibiliism
@bilibiliism 4 года назад
Its harder to do more with less.
@lilyusi
@lilyusi 4 года назад
or simply complex
@Gooberpatrol66
@Gooberpatrol66 4 года назад
simplex
@humblesoldier5474
@humblesoldier5474 4 года назад
That is Origami.
@davidacosta193
@davidacosta193 3 года назад
I really like that infinity colored foldy thingy 16:03
@lasercatto
@lasercatto 3 года назад
As an origamist wanting to be an engineer when I grow up, I appreciate this
@pandabear8862
@pandabear8862 2 года назад
I learned how to do a crane today, on the road to that engineering PHD
@lasercatto
@lasercatto 2 года назад
@@pandabear8862 Cool. JeremyShaferOrigami has some great tutorials, if you want to check him out
@mameemia
@mameemia 2 года назад
Wow hope ur progressing
@juffmou1
@juffmou1 4 года назад
Talk about smart people on earth. It is so pleasing and satisfying to watch. Thank you, I am so sharing it.
@origaminoob1037
@origaminoob1037 3 года назад
You should check out my first 2 videos
@ahnrho
@ahnrho 3 года назад
Yeah, it's absolutely hypnotic. Watching an origami structure collapse into itself is, to our eyes, what a soft whispery ASMR is to the ears.
@kanmedlife2494
@kanmedlife2494 3 года назад
I'm happy I found this channel in Quarantine
@leocorral
@leocorral 3 года назад
Where else would they be?
@origaminoob1037
@origaminoob1037 3 года назад
@@ahnrho search up Origami flasher Big Bang by Jeremy Shafer
@Hyuzuka
@Hyuzuka 4 года назад
4:46 "Those are actually bullets that have been stopped by origami" - "hm."
@MadhuAkash
@MadhuAkash 4 года назад
Its actually old at this point I think 5years or 6
@fiNitEarth
@fiNitEarth 4 года назад
It's almost comedic xdddd
@iseewhitefox2320
@iseewhitefox2320 4 года назад
666likes hmmm
@569times9
@569times9 2 года назад
I really like it when two things so different collide to create something useful
@stephenbaker6534
@stephenbaker6534 2 года назад
One of the most interesting videos on your channel dude. Such a basic thing folding is but look at how it unlocks so much.
@AnshulGuptaAG
@AnshulGuptaAG 4 года назад
Samsung Fold engineers: 'Write that down, write that down!'
@Magic_Mann
@Magic_Mann 4 года назад
Thats funny
@MA-bi2ko
@MA-bi2ko 4 года назад
That is indeed funny
@asiansupport630
@asiansupport630 4 года назад
A korean company like samsung would not stoop so low as to adopt japanese tradition and tech. Korea and Japan tend not to collaborate. It would be a very awkward situation for them politically to use origami. They have known about this for a long time. Which is a real shame, pride is not as important as progress.
@MA-bi2ko
@MA-bi2ko 4 года назад
@@asiansupport630 dude chill, it's a joke
@alephbunchofnumbers
@alephbunchofnumbers 4 года назад
@@TheKing-hr7uh didnt it sell out, despite the technical issues?
@storyspren
@storyspren 4 года назад
The expert: kaleidocycle Me, an intellectual: hexaflexagon
@AbhayKumar-cm2kh
@AbhayKumar-cm2kh 4 года назад
Underrated comment...
@2du2
@2du2 4 года назад
Yeet Vi Hart!
@BillPickle
@BillPickle 4 года назад
I noticed the hexaflexagon before I noticed the hmmms
@boltstrikes429
@boltstrikes429 4 года назад
oh yes justice for trihexaflexagon
@juliabigelow1598
@juliabigelow1598 4 года назад
Storyspren yessssssss
@korwl540
@korwl540 3 года назад
i love dealing with abstraction. it's a wonderful, beautiful thing when someone can explain so cogently the bridge between the abstraction and the real.
@MhxAir
@MhxAir 4 года назад
Scientist/Engineer: **Intelligent demonstration** Veritasium: **Minecraft Villager noises**
@charleswhite3553
@charleswhite3553 4 года назад
xbox grunts
@Mezuzah87
@Mezuzah87 4 года назад
Yeah, he's kind of a dunce.
@WingofTech
@WingofTech 4 года назад
He's doing it for us. It wouldn't be as accessible if it weren't for these essential questions he asks. ;P
@Mezuzah87
@Mezuzah87 4 года назад
@@WingofTech that's a loooot of credit you're giving him lol.
@WingofTech
@WingofTech 4 года назад
@@Mezuzah87 I mean what are his credentials? He's not a big channel for no reason. He knows what's good.
@agentg5233
@agentg5233 4 года назад
I went into surgery using the Da Vinci device for my kidneys about 6 months ago and where I would’ve had a long cut from my stomach all the way to the back of my kidney, I know have 3 tiny incisions on my stomach. It is barely noticeable and I’m glad these types of surgeries and robots are improving!
@pocarisweet8336
@pocarisweet8336 3 года назад
Bet they're expensive.
@shivacruz6557
@shivacruz6557 3 года назад
How much did you pay?
@agentg5233
@agentg5233 3 года назад
Shiva Cruz roughly $6000
@agentg5233
@agentg5233 3 года назад
DavyJones yea, they are pretty expensive
@shotor9828
@shotor9828 3 года назад
“We were working with the people who did the DaVinci surgical robot...” angry Michael reeves noises
@TexusNoe365247
@TexusNoe365247 3 года назад
I've spent well over half my life doing origami.... now I'm studying electrical engineering... possibly switching to mechatronics (combination of electrical and mechanical engineering). I hope to use origami well into the future.
@masterblaster7782
@masterblaster7782 3 года назад
7:00 the writings on the bridge are so wholesome
@user-dm8nn5rt2u
@user-dm8nn5rt2u 4 года назад
I’m Japanese and I don’t know how useful my culture origami is abroad. So I’m glad that it is introduced in this video.
@tanvirfarhan5585
@tanvirfarhan5585 3 года назад
bro Japanese people are legend love from Bangladesh
@aeebeecee3737
@aeebeecee3737 2 года назад
Thanks for culture contribution to the university
@feraltrafficcone4483
@feraltrafficcone4483 4 года назад
“This could save a company multiple millions of dollars a year on diesel” is pretty revolutionary... and yet Veritasium only says “hmmm!”
@HansLemurson
@HansLemurson 4 года назад
To be fair, his mind was already blown years ago.
@carlosandleon
@carlosandleon 4 года назад
because the percentage matters too
@azice6034
@azice6034 4 года назад
How exactly is the origami version better than a regular version?
@Yawhatnever
@Yawhatnever 4 года назад
​@@azice6034 You don't know in advance how the engines will be coupled together, so an engine with a nose cone on one haul might be connected backwards and sandwiched between two other engines in the next haul. Attaching and detaching a heavy metal nose cone would require heavy lifting machinery and additional coupling time and effort for every job. That's without considering that you need storage space at every rail yard to hold nose cones, as well as a complicated computer logistics system that makes sure every yard has nose cones stocked. There might be an asymmetrical count of arriving/departing trains, or maybe one day the station receives one long train with many engines and one nose cone, but dispatches two short trains each with fewer engines but two nose cones. It quickly explodes into a complicated juggling problem. It's much less complicated to attach a folding cone to all (or enough of) the engines in your network and leave it there, simply extending or retracting it as required by the train configuration.
@michealbay1290
@michealbay1290 4 года назад
Any dishwasher who says *MODERN ENGINEERING* has no rudimentary knowledge about any specific Branch of engineering. This origami thing would specifically apply to materials science, mechatronic and electrical mostly So Dumb
@safran4588
@safran4588 3 года назад
I could listen all day long to people like Mr. Lang that are so enthusiastic about a subject and can explain complex things so well.
@smallstudiodesign
@smallstudiodesign 2 года назад
I love how ancient traditions become relevant in the present and future ‼️✨💖✨
@Kriojenic
@Kriojenic 3 года назад
You're telling me my obsession with origami as a kid wasn't all for nothing
@Palladiumavoid
@Palladiumavoid 2 года назад
Im still obsessed
@slevinchannel7589
@slevinchannel7589 2 года назад
@@Palladiumavoid Wasnt there an Anime about this Concept? 1 with a Great Start and a Laughably Bad Ending?
@SinHurr
@SinHurr Год назад
No obsession is for nothing if you apply yourself properly.
@siidthe007
@siidthe007 Год назад
Very true my father used to teach me origami when I was a child, and now I feel why he loved it, he was a mining engineering and he used to make paper models for his colleagues to show mines and different forms of stones.I am so happy I still love this art.
@izzuddinmnasir4884
@izzuddinmnasir4884 Год назад
Its still nothing if you never find it useful
@tarunkashyap8515
@tarunkashyap8515 4 года назад
Owen Wilson : "WOW" Veritasium : Hold my "Hmmph"
@zes3813
@zes3813 4 года назад
wrg, say any nmw s ok
@charleswhite3553
@charleswhite3553 4 года назад
@@zes3813 how to answer in millennial
@Z3R0F1V3
@Z3R0F1V3 4 года назад
underrated?
@mitchellchermak8071
@mitchellchermak8071 2 года назад
Wow! I think this may be the most fascinating video I've seen on your channel. There is so much complex math and engineering going on here. It's really difficult to visualize the motion/folding of structures like this, and it amazes me how people are able to figure it out. The applications of this work are awesome as well. Thanks for sharing!
@eshansharma9458
@eshansharma9458 Год назад
I am impressed by the guy(s) who folded these. such a precision and praiseworthy patience.
@wealthiness
@wealthiness 4 года назад
* Veritusium looks out window & sees the apocalypse happening * "hmmm"
@poopideeshroop2732
@poopideeshroop2732 4 года назад
@@johannesstaats9698 no
@joeynavarro6762
@joeynavarro6762 4 года назад
This aged well
@CarnivorousPlantsAndGardening
@CarnivorousPlantsAndGardening 4 года назад
*little paper man playing violin* "Fantastic!"
@DafterHindi
@DafterHindi 3 года назад
@@joeynavarro6762 *really nicely*
@webentwicklungmitrobinspan6935
@webentwicklungmitrobinspan6935 2 года назад
hmmm.
@Ricky-cn2io
@Ricky-cn2io 4 года назад
Veritasium hits 10 Million subs. Veritasium: "hmm."
@narunaruboy
@narunaruboy Год назад
折り紙が世界で活躍してるのは驚きだし嬉しい
@leeshepard5718
@leeshepard5718 Год назад
Me too!
@cielo_ciel_
@cielo_ciel_ Год назад
それを知らない日本人って残念
@leeshepard5718
@leeshepard5718 Год назад
@@cielo_ciel_ what do you mean? why wouldn't people in Japan know their own culture?
@cielo_ciel_
@cielo_ciel_ Год назад
@@leeshepard5718 “that” (それ) is referring to “I’m surprised to see origami’s application on a global scale” part of the original comment. Not the culture itself.
@Whombulance
@Whombulance 2 года назад
I met and got to hear from one of the professors who works on this my freshman year. The message: incorporate every kind of information into what you do and that innovation will give great success.
@alsadekalkhayer7007
@alsadekalkhayer7007 3 года назад
I envy clever people who found their path. They sure offered the humanity something
@pamelaangela7622
@pamelaangela7622 3 года назад
I envy clever people who found their path. They sure offered the humanity something
@michaelg8841
@michaelg8841 3 года назад
I envy clever people who found their path. They sure offered the humanity something
@alsadekalkhayer7007
@alsadekalkhayer7007 3 года назад
Why is my comment being reposted?
@SiddheshBagade
@SiddheshBagade 3 года назад
I envy clever people who found their path. They sure offered the humanity something - Alsadek Alkhayer, 2020. . P.S.: your comment is being reposted because it sounds like a proverb some great guy once said.
@alsadekalkhayer7007
@alsadekalkhayer7007 3 года назад
@@SiddheshBagade wow, now I'm flattered, thanks Seddhesh Bagade! ☺️🙏🏻
@easytomove
@easytomove 3 года назад
Me : *doing art to escape from math Dr. Robert : origami is a math Me : *oh crap
@karaqakkzl
@karaqakkzl 3 года назад
asians: *Reorado Dikapurio fesu*
@prithishs4186
@prithishs4186 3 года назад
Hahaha Math is omnipresent. Btw I'm surprised that a art major is watching Veritasium.
@oldschoolman1444
@oldschoolman1444 3 года назад
Math is universal, it's the key to everything.
@lilyaholmes109
@lilyaholmes109 3 года назад
@@prithishs4186 Yt recommendation are pretty random sometimes
@juliachristinaheikamp246
@juliachristinaheikamp246 3 года назад
I make art because of math, so I can be united with it. And I started with origami because of geometry, which is a major element of my work. I love math, but I have mild discalculia, meaning, I am "dyslexic" with calculating numbers. I can't calculate in my head, I always need paper or objects. But I am good in understanding the stuff around it, and I have very good spatial recognition. When you are much into music, you also have a natural grip on math, in fact, everything is math.
@gabiballetje
@gabiballetje 3 года назад
The last few years we've also seen many of those flip up and fold out story books with huge hbuildings and numerous animals inside that sometimes also have tabs to move or animate them and more simple stuff as well. It's pretty awesome how much you can get done that way, but man is it difficult to come up with often. They're pretty intense long lasting projects often.
@drcubix
@drcubix 2 года назад
Man.. thank you! Really. We would have never known this stuff without your channel.
@ornessarhithfaeron3576
@ornessarhithfaeron3576 4 года назад
Him: A caleidocycle Me, an intellectual: hexaflexagon
@StuartHector
@StuartHector 4 года назад
Hexaflexagon is the 2D version
@smellyeggs8435
@smellyeggs8435 4 года назад
@@StuartHector r/wooosh
@meghanstrudwick4100
@meghanstrudwick4100 4 года назад
me, channelling big brain energy: *rInG oF rOtAtInG rHoMbIc TeTrAhEdRa*
@NotFine
@NotFine 4 года назад
@@meghanstrudwick4100 absolutely big brain
@damncat2793
@damncat2793 4 года назад
@@smellyeggs8435 no
@_PhoenixFlare_
@_PhoenixFlare_ 4 года назад
Someone says a profound mechanical innovation: Veritasium: Mmm
@enricobianchi4499
@enricobianchi4499 4 года назад
hm!
@gracefool
@gracefool 4 года назад
"Millions of dollars a year!" Veritasium: Mmm
@enricobianchi4499
@enricobianchi4499 4 года назад
@@gracefool wait a minute are you the same gracefool that moderates the xisumavoid server or is it just an insane coincidence?
@eval_is_evil
@eval_is_evil 4 года назад
"Dude i slept with your wife" Veritasium: Mmm
@DrSardonicus
@DrSardonicus 4 года назад
Mmm
@RSLT
@RSLT Год назад
Love it! I wish I had seen this sooner. Very interesting!!! Thanks, Derek, for publishing very unique videos.
@bcantero89
@bcantero89 3 года назад
Love all your shows. Will start showing these videos to my 8th grade students. Thank you. Congratulations for exceeding expectations
@azlhiacneg
@azlhiacneg 4 года назад
YOU'VE MET ROBERT LANG?!
@veritasium
@veritasium 4 года назад
hahaha he lives not far from my house...
@mr2octavio
@mr2octavio 4 года назад
@@veritasium HE LIVES *NOT FAR* FROM YOUR HOUSE?
@simontay4851
@simontay4851 4 года назад
But how far is "not far"? Not far can be an hours drive or more in the US.
@2inthemorning
@2inthemorning 4 года назад
I met him once 5 years ago at a small origami convention in Ohio. It was really, really cool.
@logitech4873
@logitech4873 4 года назад
@@user-ep1hp7vj6p 100 what?
@SavageDragon999
@SavageDragon999 4 года назад
Scientist: *says something interesting and revolutionary* Veritasium: Huh
@juliocamacho8354
@juliocamacho8354 4 года назад
That violinist tho
@revolvency
@revolvency 4 года назад
Heh, huh
@user-ui3fh3ox1x
@user-ui3fh3ox1x 2 месяца назад
0:30 can we just take a moment to apreciate whoever made this animation
@ashn7146
@ashn7146 2 месяца назад
I'm glad there are people in the world this talented and smart. I can't imagine being able to do anything in this video
@crustyoldfart
@crustyoldfart 3 года назад
I graduated in mechanical engineering over 60 years ago from a good school. This origami stuff makes me feel like a Neandertaler. Amazing stuff !
@aronious291
@aronious291 3 года назад
Go back to school to learn all the new stuff! Or just sit in the classes. Ask the professor before hand, theyre usually really cool about it.
@JBulsa
@JBulsa 2 года назад
Neandler never existed
@slevinchannel7589
@slevinchannel7589 2 года назад
@@aronious291 My i randomly recommend some more Science-Channels?
@Altair2786
@Altair2786 2 года назад
@@slevinchannel7589 yes please
@dremr2038
@dremr2038 2 года назад
@@aronious291 no school is teaching that. All they are teaching is theory, even in engineering xD
@sebione3576
@sebione3576 4 года назад
This is like magic to me. I can't even fold my underwear to be able to fit in my dresser drawer.
@simontay4851
@simontay4851 4 года назад
Why do you even bother. I just stuff my underwear in the drawer unfolded. Doesn't matter because its small. I can understand folding larger items of clothing such as t-shirts and jeans because they take up more space.
@Gribbo9999
@Gribbo9999 4 года назад
No problem. Just wear the same underwear for a couple of weeks and then you can stand it up. No need to fold.
@keahibailey2646
@keahibailey2646 4 года назад
Why do you wear underwear? Just go commando
@dddmemaybe
@dddmemaybe 4 года назад
@@keahibailey2646 bruh you're an genus, congratulashawns
@Syncromatic
@Syncromatic 4 года назад
I find the “army roll” works great for boxers. Really it’s great for any “tubular” piece of clothes. Heck i even use it to fold tote bags. Give it a try it can be quite relaxing to fold things :)
@Dreamheartcat
@Dreamheartcat 2 года назад
I love doing origami. I did them just from books I found with less than helpful diagrams. People were impressed by that, but I have never designed my own. Now those people are impressive!
@columbus8myhw
@columbus8myhw 4 года назад
Small Japanese lesson: Paper = kami (becomes "gami" in compounds) To fold = oru (becomes "ori" in compounds) To cut = kiru (becomes "kiri" in compounds) Paper folding = oru+kami = origami Less well-known but also interesting: Paper cutting = kiru+kami = kirigami (Kirigami is kind of like a subset of origami 'cause there's still a big emphasis on folding) EDIT: Kirigami is basically what's used in popup books
@celinak5062
@celinak5062 4 года назад
+
@DrewLSsix
@DrewLSsix 4 года назад
Ah... now I see how shinigami comes from kami (god).
@invluo3219
@invluo3219 4 года назад
@@DrewLSsix gami in shinigami is 神 (god) gami in origami is 紙 (paper) unrelated
@kamil118
@kamil118 4 года назад
What's all this hair talk?
@oldcowbb
@oldcowbb 4 года назад
@@invluo3219 a lot of anime use this for their pun name
@bulldozer8950
@bulldozer8950 4 года назад
“So I heard you have another origami invention” “Well yes I made plans to fold a working computer out of a piece of paper. It doesn’t have any internal memory yet though...” “Hmm”
@coyotedomino
@coyotedomino 4 года назад
That’s actually an interesting thought. How could one make logic gates out of origami...
@andymcl92
@andymcl92 4 года назад
@@coyotedomino in a sense, those pincers were an and gate. You need to move both sides for them to pinch, or else the whole thing would just move aside. If you used a physical barrier to prevent it from turning, you could make it an or gate where pushing either side would work.
@Vikesh7896
@Vikesh7896 4 года назад
A key board mechanism could be easily made via origami engineering, laptop hinges might under go an origami revolution too.
@jesaljoseph9612
@jesaljoseph9612 2 года назад
The technology becomes beautiful when several branches of human creativity comes together.
@hhbmm1316
@hhbmm1316 Год назад
日本人より真面目に折り紙に向き合ってる
@gamemeister27
@gamemeister27 4 года назад
Robert Lang has been one of my favorite academics, ever, since when I first heard about his landmark achievements and saw the origami they could produce. It's as beautiful as mathematics gets in a non mathematical appearance. It reminds me of how generalizing juggling patterns into mathematical theory revealed new patterns that were unknown to jugglers at the time.
@shinikim4207
@shinikim4207 3 года назад
伝統文化がこんな風に最新技術として応用されるのは素敵な事だと思う。
@nicolausteslaus
@nicolausteslaus Год назад
Poruno with a schooroogirsu watching desu?
@felixling8976
@felixling8976 Год назад
I agree.
@eitarokonishishepherd253
@eitarokonishishepherd253 9 месяцев назад
本当にそう思う
@ridwansetiadi8393
@ridwansetiadi8393 2 года назад
Now that is some serious material engineering ! I think I'm interested in the origami algorithm ^^ Civil Engineering, for instance, as far as I know, avoids folding material because it makes the material locally easier to fail at that fold, especially steel. But, there is a several way to increase stiffness by adding some fold or a thick "bump" in a such way, so it increases the sectional inertia. Cool cool, great work ! Great video !
@huzaimahjulai7383
@huzaimahjulai7383 2 года назад
Civil engineering? Oh man, the stress! Stresses everywhere, any which way you go!
@carrickrichards2457
@carrickrichards2457 Год назад
Beautiful, relevant and even essential for a grasp of the future. Well presented and nice work. Thank you.
@jackgrg1429
@jackgrg1429 4 года назад
*sees the cactus* Me: oh I want to make that Pros: it’s uses 1 meter paper Me: I can afford that... Pros: It took seven years to complete Me: I gonna head out..
@lynx655
@lynx655 4 года назад
Jack grg he had to design it from zero. If you have the solution, you can fold it faster.
@DJAsHeRMusic
@DJAsHeRMusic 4 года назад
I'm sure you could do it in a day if you had a super long instructions. It probably took him 7 years trying to work it out by trial and error and his maths. I'm sure its 1 of a kind there might be other origami cactus but no 1 with them diamentions. Watching this really makes me want to do some origami now think I would try simpler things 😂. Really love that thing that keeps spinning with diffrent colours might give that ago.
@JorgetePanete
@JorgetePanete 4 года назад
_it's uses_ 10/10 English lmao
@JorgetePanete
@JorgetePanete 4 года назад
Btw, check your grammar.
@JorgetePanete
@JorgetePanete 4 года назад
@Moon Base You forgot the fact that I do both.
@brianevans4
@brianevans4 4 года назад
So many satisfying clips in this video!
@veritasium
@veritasium 4 года назад
I thought so!
@bigman489
@bigman489 4 года назад
Veritasium Great video as usual!
@keahibailey2646
@keahibailey2646 4 года назад
@@veritasium dude, I want a heart.
@finesse5820
@finesse5820 4 года назад
@@keahibailey2646 if you ask for it, you ain't gonna get it bud
@keahibailey2646
@keahibailey2646 4 года назад
@Alexander Supertramp Working on it
@micah2936
@micah2936 2 года назад
This is so inspiring. Now I know to study origami techniques to make my projects more compact.
@joyceboudwin826
@joyceboudwin826 2 года назад
I referred to your video in my homeschool co- op class today. The 10 to 12 year olds were glued to my every word when I jumped from folding a cup to talking about unfolding a solar panel in outer space.
@Sonicgott
@Sonicgott 4 года назад
It’s like art and science were separated at birth.
@k.o.dentertainment743
@k.o.dentertainment743 4 года назад
Yeah, but they complete each other!!
@vgman94
@vgman94 4 года назад
Both are expressions of reality. Art expresses the imagination. What could be. Science tries to make what is imagined into a present reality. What will, is, or should be.
@kaitokobayashi6394
@kaitokobayashi6394 4 года назад
@@vgman94 which means the use of imagination to fuel science is one if not the best method humans can progress. (I mean, just look at every famous and revolutionary inventor ever)
@jeffvader811
@jeffvader811 4 года назад
If you want a cool example of art and science being mixed, look at some of Robert McCalls work.
@user-uq8nl7mt6r
@user-uq8nl7mt6r 4 года назад
"There are only a handfull of paterns in japan, maybe 100, 200 total" How big are this guys hands??
@richielavey1565
@richielavey1565 4 года назад
F maybe they’re microscopic designs lol
@patrick1532
@patrick1532 4 года назад
I mean Idk how small your hands are but I can certainly fit 200 sheets of paper in my hand
@user-uq8nl7mt6r
@user-uq8nl7mt6r 4 года назад
@@patrick1532 you know he talked about 1x1m papers right?
@ViratKohli-jj3wj
@ViratKohli-jj3wj 4 года назад
@@user-uq8nl7mt6r woooosh
@smellyeggs8435
@smellyeggs8435 4 года назад
@@user-uq8nl7mt6r r/woosh
@roadshowautosports
@roadshowautosports 2 года назад
This was awesome! Knowing that mathematics can define seams in an origami, never thought of it. Always admired the visual end result of it but, talk about thinking INSIDE THE BOX!!!!
@serhiylashkov1415
@serhiylashkov1415 Год назад
It's just an incredible combination of art and science. These guys're geniuses!
@MrShoopdawoop97
@MrShoopdawoop97 4 года назад
"Hm." My man's about to grow a huge nose and start trading emeralds.
@kozara8202
@kozara8202 3 года назад
@@w1therrrrarchive5 lol
@unrealpigzgaming8014
@unrealpigzgaming8014 3 года назад
@@w1therrrrarchive5 you too
@mihailmilev9909
@mihailmilev9909 3 года назад
@@unrealpigzgaming8014 lol
@blackairforce6999
@blackairforce6999 3 года назад
was gonna play MC after this video lol
@anon7326
@anon7326 4 года назад
Those folding patterns remind me of protein structures. I wonder if any of these concepts have been applied to organic chemistry.
@mimiwimi7917
@mimiwimi7917 4 года назад
Anonymous?
@joshuatdlr
@joshuatdlr 4 года назад
Yes! Look into the work of Erik Demaine.
@user-yb5cn3np5q
@user-yb5cn3np5q 4 года назад
Yes, for billion years. Search for "atp synthase gif".
@ericdufrane2344
@ericdufrane2344 3 года назад
Heck ya
@coolfer2
@coolfer2 3 года назад
@@ericdufrane2344 Yup, life is in a way, replicating itself using origami. DNA is sort of the crease pattern.
@tigre3droyce771
@tigre3droyce771 3 года назад
I love Lang's insect origami book. I lost days making some of the models. All worth it.
@watchdogbypass
@watchdogbypass 3 года назад
if i was in a origami contest with that guy i'd fold
@YourCapybaraAmigo_17yrsago
@YourCapybaraAmigo_17yrsago 2 года назад
Ba dum tsssss! 🥇
@markjgaletti57
@markjgaletti57 4 года назад
ME: all excited about trying origami Brain: did he say math
@9308323
@9308323 4 года назад
Math is fun.
@soulextracter
@soulextracter 4 года назад
@@9308323 Not when you don't know it!
@drillerdev4624
@drillerdev4624 4 года назад
I'd suggest Creative Origami by Kunihiko Kasahara as a good classic starter book that gives you enough base to start exploring on your own. He sometimes breaks some rules (like ussing scissors, triangles, or glue), but it was a great stepping stone for me as a folder back in the day.
@9308323
@9308323 4 года назад
​@@soulextracter That goes basically for everything.
@ruihe9639
@ruihe9639 2 года назад
This is very interesting and as an armature origami lover, I use origami as an encryption device, only by certain pattern of unfolding can the origami be dissembled to reveal its content, or through certain deformation the message will appear in a correct way. This is a physical representation of uneven encryption.
@manumusicmist
@manumusicmist 2 года назад
And I can't make anything other than the paper airplane :(
@user-zi1cr6zc7q
@user-zi1cr6zc7q Год назад
I am proud that the culture of Origami exists in Japan!
@bulantujuh
@bulantujuh 4 года назад
12:22 also i adore when professionals are actually able to explain something in such simple terms! thanks so much! :D
@Benzy670
@Benzy670 4 года назад
nuazka - that’s how you know someone is truly knowledgeable about something.
@abdoumenouer7762
@abdoumenouer7762 4 года назад
1:57 I was like: Wow this looks really hard, it probably took many months... reality: 7 years. Oh, Okay... That really shows the level of commitment needed to make something really impressive.
@Noname-cp3zm
@Noname-cp3zm Год назад
I thought it was like 45 min
@marascaartes8021
@marascaartes8021 2 года назад
Que maravilhoso ver um vídeo onde revela a minha antiga paixão pelo origami, sempre q posso tento desenvolver algum tipo de dobradura não desisto nunca😊👍
@julians3danimations
@julians3danimations Год назад
I just noticed this: The atomic number of element Ve is i, or sqrt(-1) and the atomic mass is 42, the answer to life, the universe, and everything (reference to Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy). I think that's really cool.
@IRunOnE85
@IRunOnE85 4 года назад
Something: is compliant Veritasium: TARGET LOCATED
@lolbosss
@lolbosss 4 года назад
*how paint dries*
@diegosanchez894
@diegosanchez894 4 года назад
Now we just have to create a folding pipe that allows laminar flow and destin and derek will both be all over it.
@Fillware
@Fillware 4 года назад
I am staggered. All the science AND Robert Lang himself explaining crease patterns and origami design? what a treasure!
@the_rat_king9796
@the_rat_king9796 3 года назад
Him: Spends seven years making a origami cactus Also Him: You can make a flat sheet into something else with relative ease
@asimjadoon4936
@asimjadoon4936 4 года назад
*hmm I should try this* "This took 7 years start to finish" *Yeahhh no*
@fuseteam
@fuseteam 4 года назад
that's specific for the cactus fwiw
@tiefkluehlfeuer
@tiefkluehlfeuer 4 года назад
I wonder if this included planning or only the folding itself. Would it take another 7 years to create a second cactus?
@o_o............
@o_o............ 4 года назад
@@tiefkluehlfeuer probably not
@readmore8974
@readmore8974 4 года назад
@@tiefkluehlfeuer I would assume that it also includes the planning
@fuseteam
@fuseteam 4 года назад
@@tiefkluehlfeuer good question for reference he folded a square meter piece of paper into a cactus including all the spines that are smaller than a human pinky
@origamiorange4539
@origamiorange4539 4 года назад
Being an origamist myself, I find it amazing that origami is becoming so useful in the real world. Robert Lang is amazing I actually took his class at an origami convention and saw the cactus. One of my friends actually made the cactus!
@Hotbusterer
@Hotbusterer 4 года назад
How long did it take your friend to complete the cactus?
@bleh8789
@bleh8789 4 года назад
Yeah how long does the cactus take
@origamiorange4539
@origamiorange4539 4 года назад
Maks Mamla took him 20-30 hours but he still has 5-10 hours left of shaping. Very labor intensive process
@bleh8789
@bleh8789 4 года назад
@@origamiorange4539 that's wild, I wish him luck
@lukelayton1028
@lukelayton1028 4 года назад
7 years likely included the design processes and iterations
@goblin0887
@goblin0887 2 года назад
This is insane. There must be so many other promising fields which have uses in such areas but are neglected due to them just not being well known.
@youbigtubership
@youbigtubership 2 года назад
Utterly brilliant. Once again, a RU-vid interviewee reminds me how amazing a human brain can be, and how limited I am.
@overthecounterbeanie
@overthecounterbeanie 4 года назад
Scientist: So here's the cure for cancer. Veritasium: Hunh
@Benzy670
@Benzy670 4 года назад
I don’t like to throw the word, “genius,” around lightly, but I’m convinced solely from this video that Robert Lang is a genius.
@AMOGHAJAYANTHMK
@AMOGHAJAYANTHMK 4 года назад
no u
@danfg7215
@danfg7215 4 года назад
as an aerobic life form, he’s breathtaking
@ArsenicDrone
@ArsenicDrone 4 года назад
If you delve further into his works, you'll find more genius
@decidingodin2518
@decidingodin2518 3 года назад
Lang was on tell the truth and I recognized him from this video. Pretty cool I was able to recognize someone because of youtube!
@PrasadBVRSN
@PrasadBVRSN 2 года назад
I still remember I folded a paper to make a gun which I failed to repeat after I gave original to my brother (after he asked for it) and it become a childhood memory.. really like to learn some of these ... thanks much for video
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