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How Does The Space Cup Work? 

The Action Lab
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11 апр 2024

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Комментарии : 1,5 тыс.   
@1mlister
@1mlister 17 дней назад
It took 50 years for NASA to find this design as no engineers had seen anything like it.
@aleksitjvladica.
@aleksitjvladica. 17 дней назад
True.
@johnsmithe4656
@johnsmithe4656 17 дней назад
That explains why engineers have so few kids.
@Ehatntmtntahe
@Ehatntmtntahe 17 дней назад
​@@johnsmithe4656😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@genseek00
@genseek00 17 дней назад
"the Russians used a pencil". Like John Wick to kill 3 men, ha-ha.
@doktorrobingram
@doktorrobingram 17 дней назад
It took one brilliant astronaut, Don Pettit, to design this, with some scavenged Mylar sheeting and Kapton tape, while in orbit.
@someguyontheinternet7165
@someguyontheinternet7165 17 дней назад
This cup has me feeling astronaughty
@efslab
@efslab 17 дней назад
HGAHAHAHA
@sirkurac3971
@sirkurac3971 17 дней назад
why naughty, though??
@asandax6
@asandax6 17 дней назад
That joke is astro not.
@davinawonderling9361
@davinawonderling9361 17 дней назад
😂😂
@davinawonderling9361
@davinawonderling9361 17 дней назад
​@@sirkurac3971Why naught? 😂
@WHALEx3
@WHALEx3 17 дней назад
I came straight to the comments and they didn’t disappoint
@Zlee533
@Zlee533 5 часов назад
You came, you say?
@ibbyseed
@ibbyseed 17 дней назад
“If we wanna drink” -hard cut to him absolutely GUZZLING water-
@swedneck
@swedneck 17 дней назад
hydro homie
@maxxeddd
@maxxeddd 17 дней назад
why does he drink with his tongue like that😂
@imperfectclark
@imperfectclark 16 дней назад
lmao he slams it for no reason
@OnlyKoolaid
@OnlyKoolaid 16 дней назад
@@maxxeddd That's how you treat a lady.
@DD-lc9jv
@DD-lc9jv 16 дней назад
Hes got me over here blocking this channel, so I don't EVER accidently click on something like this again!
@notjack1895
@notjack1895 17 дней назад
Not the cupsy
@randomsomeguy156
@randomsomeguy156 17 дней назад
Cupussy?
@Kagami_kazuya69
@Kagami_kazuya69 17 дней назад
Of course, of fucking course. 😂
@mikelpeepee
@mikelpeepee 17 дней назад
nuh uh 💀💀💀
@aYtto
@aYtto 17 дней назад
Never cook again
@frantaspacek9583
@frantaspacek9583 17 дней назад
did you really have to?
@MaverickJeyKidding
@MaverickJeyKidding 17 дней назад
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="25">0:25</a> - i thought you were about to say "and thanks to gravity for sponsoring this video" :D
@MbitaChizi
@MbitaChizi 17 дней назад
My parents said if I reach 10k, they'd buy me a professional camera for recording... Pls guys Im literally begging you!.
@MbitaChizi
@MbitaChizi 17 дней назад
My parents said if I reach 10k, they'd buy me a professional camera for recording... Pls guys Im literally begging you!.
@AbhenandanJain
@AbhenandanJain 17 дней назад
Best comment so far😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@Josf-xz3hw
@Josf-xz3hw 17 дней назад
😂😂😂
@enemy1704
@enemy1704 17 дней назад
​@@MbitaChizi Go back to your work at McDonalds. - Dad
@doktorrobingram
@doktorrobingram 16 дней назад
Astronaut Don Pettit invented this while aboard the ISS using some Mylar sheeting and Kapton tape. On another flight he repurposed some "spare" parts and a cordless screwdriver to create a barn door tracker, a type of camera mount that can compensate for either the Earth's rotation on land, or a space craft's orbital velocity. Using this he was the first to capture sharp images of cities lit by their own artificial light at night from orbit. Don Pettit is scheduled to return to the ISS in September for his fourth ISS mission.
@BiteSizedObject
@BiteSizedObject 15 дней назад
cool
@b4ph0m3tdk9
@b4ph0m3tdk9 15 дней назад
Thx!
@coffee_and_spite8164
@coffee_and_spite8164 14 дней назад
He also wrote a funny blog from the perspective of a zucchini plant that he grew on the ISS called “Diary of a Space Zucchini” and a photo book of pictures he took from space called Spaceborn
@justinnewman13
@justinnewman13 14 дней назад
According to his Wiki that cup was the first invention in space to receive a patent
@markbruska3759
@markbruska3759 13 дней назад
😂
@Meenaia
@Meenaia 17 дней назад
First thing I thought of before even watching was utilizing surface tension. It felt nice to feel smart for a minute for the first time in months. Now time to go back to my factory job.
@brianjones9780
@brianjones9780 16 дней назад
Right there with ya bro, I had the same thought and I work at a cattle feed mill.
@1AlexanderCole
@1AlexanderCole 16 дней назад
I’m retired military “knuckle dragger” helicopter mechanic, but I did help develop some NASA ideas when I would hang out with them while I borrowed their heat treating oven for my parts! I even helped brainstorm some ideas for toileting!
@keslyajennifer
@keslyajennifer 16 дней назад
You were pretty Smart. Congratulations
@Axel_Andersen
@Axel_Andersen 16 дней назад
Most solutions are obvious once you find a problem that needs a solution.
@Chugabutt69
@Chugabutt69 12 дней назад
My second favorite part about education is already knowing the answer. My favorite is learning them.
@robertk1701
@robertk1701 17 дней назад
I like the idea that an orbit is just falling and missing repeatedly. We should celebrate every 6 months that we fell to the other side of the sun without getting burned up.
@raymondcahyadi3094
@raymondcahyadi3094 17 дней назад
We did celebrate it, its just we celebrated it when we more or less come back to where we started, its called new year🎉
@DustyGamma
@DustyGamma 17 дней назад
​@@raymondcahyadi3094 Or a birthday!
@jerrylim6722
@jerrylim6722 17 дней назад
@@raymondcahyadi3094 and every 4 years we celebrate making multiple cycles without becoming too crispy, by adding a whole entire day to the calendar.
@ozien2
@ozien2 17 дней назад
@@jerrylim6722 Well not *every* four years. 3 out of every 4 centuries we skip the leap for the last year of the century. (1900 wasn't a leap year, and 2100 won't be a leap year.) We just happen to live in that one out of every four centuries where there was no century skip of the leap year.
@MrAlRats
@MrAlRats 17 дней назад
I would say, an orbit is just falling without the body you are orbiting around getting in your way. When you throw an object on the surface of the Earth, the object eventually intersects the Earth and prevents it from falling any further. If there was no atmosphere and you could throw the object fast enough, it would go around the Earth and hit you on the back at the same speed you threw it (Rest In Peace). Falling/Orbiting objects mostly just keep going around the body that it is falling towards, as opposed to heading towards the centre of the body. It's actually very difficult to get anything to fall straight into the Sun to get burned up, because you would need to slow the object down a lot before it can fall towards the Sun such that it intersects the surface of the Sun. This takes a lot of fuel.
@pastarzzoto
@pastarzzoto 17 дней назад
As those space cups are defying gravity, they are planning a cosmic tea party without us.
@manowand
@manowand 17 дней назад
We want a Cup of liber -tea
@DaveFromColorado
@DaveFromColorado 16 дней назад
Now what would the flat earthers say about this?
@JerryCan101
@JerryCan101 16 дней назад
@@manowand helldivers reference maybe?
@thedeliveryboy1123
@thedeliveryboy1123 15 дней назад
in space, what gravity is there to defy?
@JerryCan101
@JerryCan101 15 дней назад
@@thedeliveryboy1123 wait yeah you right
@unvergebeneid
@unvergebeneid 17 дней назад
I love that at the beginning, the video unironically explains to you how to drink from a cup 😄
@pierrotA
@pierrotA 17 дней назад
If you think about it, it's very hard to do. You need to tilt the cup until it's too close to you nose, then tilt your head... while getting some liquid in your month, stop breathing, switch to your stomac, swallow, and start again. There is a lot of thing that we do automatically without realizing how we do it. Like walking, opening a door, drinking... Try making animations of thoses things, I'm sure you will have to do the movement at some point to "remember" how it's done.
@SafetyLucas
@SafetyLucas 16 дней назад
@@pierrotA If you don't think about it, its very easy to do.
@pierrotA
@pierrotA 16 дней назад
@@SafetyLucas Yes, it's the problem in space... You cannot rely on the genetic memory and the years of training. Everything is hard and need to be learned again. Obviously you do not remember, but for years you were unable to drink in a glass, walk, etc. You learn how to drink from plastics cup with small inclined opening, like everyone else. It's the meaning of my message: it *is* hard to drink from a cup, you just learn how to do it for years... And you do not know exactly how you do it, you just repeat what you learn from thoses years of training without thinking it. For someone that learn very young how to cook, program, or whatever, it feel easy... Do not mean it is.
@westonding8953
@westonding8953 16 дней назад
Teach a robot with a mouth and hands to do it.
@markgarr7836
@markgarr7836 16 дней назад
And not a minute too soon, I was about to die of thirst!
@Greedygoblingames
@Greedygoblingames 17 дней назад
The description of the ISS being in constant freefall reminded me of The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy; flying being the art (or rather, knack) of throwing oneself at the ground and missing. Basically, what the ISS is doing. 😂😂
@randomnik70
@randomnik70 17 дней назад
My wife has a cup exactly like this one
@efslab
@efslab 17 дней назад
LOL
@grayrabbit2211
@grayrabbit2211 17 дней назад
Where do you think they got these from?
@johnsmithe4656
@johnsmithe4656 17 дней назад
And you can do more than drink from it.
@wslrichards
@wslrichards 17 дней назад
​@@grayrabbit2211 find a milf.
@lussor1
@lussor1 16 дней назад
😅​@@grayrabbit2211
@Duolingo5476
@Duolingo5476 17 дней назад
"i think i have seen that shape somewhere 🤔" - little timmy
@radhika5302
@radhika5302 17 дней назад
Duo going wild
@radhika5302
@radhika5302 17 дней назад
Duo is getting wild nowadays
@anzaklaynimation
@anzaklaynimation 17 дней назад
It is third time I'm seeing duo today.
@Duolingo5476
@Duolingo5476 17 дней назад
@@anzaklaynimation do ur lessons already 😠
@dadfrty1978
@dadfrty1978 17 дней назад
3:19
@theRealSlimGordon
@theRealSlimGordon 17 дней назад
I know that it looks funny, but it's honestly incredibile how sometimes the best solution to a problem is so "simple". Human ingenuity at its finest.
@alfiedotwtf
@alfiedotwtf 12 дней назад
The stole the design from nature 🤣
@Gi0Oo
@Gi0Oo 17 дней назад
2 astronauts 1 space cup
@marktovar331
@marktovar331 17 дней назад
The water climbs up the crack 💀💀
@FerdinandFake
@FerdinandFake 17 дней назад
Also a problem after drinking water in space
@dalbianco
@dalbianco 16 дней назад
Crevice
@furonwarrior
@furonwarrior 16 дней назад
Imagine having diarrhea in space.
@ShivanshParihar_0
@ShivanshParihar_0 17 дней назад
Not me violating the cup every time I take a sip💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀
@ivanetniage7493
@ivanetniage7493 17 дней назад
At the start of the mission there is a disclaimer stating that every sip you take is consensual
@drakonyanazkar
@drakonyanazkar 17 дней назад
Underrated joke right there
@ShivanshParihar_0
@ShivanshParihar_0 16 дней назад
Thnx
@sameershelar2000
@sameershelar2000 17 дней назад
I like that you find really thoughtful ways to demonstrate phenomena. Very creative.
@Malakaiser
@Malakaiser 17 дней назад
I'm a mature adult... I'm a mature adult... I'm a mature adult... I'm a mature adult... I'm a mature adult... I'm a mature adult......
@tonuahmed4227
@tonuahmed4227 16 дней назад
CUPUSSY
@PandazGT
@PandazGT 10 дней назад
lies…
@PoopGuyGaming505
@PoopGuyGaming505 10 дней назад
No your not 🚫🚫🚫🚫🚫🚫🚫🚫🚫🚫🚫🚫🚫🚫🚫🚫
@Revengilate
@Revengilate 5 дней назад
Whats the matter
@siriusmywaifu4043
@siriusmywaifu4043 4 дня назад
"Only the remorse etched onto ones mind, can make one emerge from their pupa."
@3dhYT
@3dhYT 17 дней назад
Special shape you say.
@sinder_78
@sinder_78 17 дней назад
gotta love how everyone is thinking the same thing
@Divinicus1er
@Divinicus1er 17 дней назад
That's one of the thing that's probably hardcoded in our genes.
@deadbeats4894
@deadbeats4894 17 дней назад
There's something wrong with you if you're not thinking of it.
@car0lanne.
@car0lanne. 16 дней назад
@@deadbeats4894 i guess theres something wrong with me...
@cozzy124
@cozzy124 16 дней назад
@@deadbeats4894damn
@MintBunHunter
@MintBunHunter 16 дней назад
​@@deadbeats4894 took me a long time to discard such thoughts. twas worth it
@GooogleGoglee
@GooogleGoglee 17 дней назад
Such a simple and elegant solution! Beautiful ❤️😍
@_DML_
@_DML_ 16 дней назад
I like the look of that cup very much.
@jackbuff_I
@jackbuff_I 17 дней назад
Coincidentally.. I think that shape might be very useful for retrieving used liquids from certain body lines and crevices.
@EduardRitok
@EduardRitok 16 дней назад
"we should be able to see the water climb up the crack " 😂😂😂 well..that cracked me up
@peterisaksson9915
@peterisaksson9915 17 дней назад
Thats.. Just simply brilliant!
@StuffandThings_
@StuffandThings_ 17 дней назад
My guess before watching is that there's some clever trick involving surface tension, where the tendency of a liquid to minimize surface area is used to hold liquid in the cup in most orientations and to encourage it to flow out when tipped in the right way. Fluid mechanics has all sorts of cool stuff to it that most people never even think about!
@lo0nyt0onz
@lo0nyt0onz 17 дней назад
Everything reminds me of her. 😢
@johnsmithe4656
@johnsmithe4656 17 дней назад
LOL
@daveg5857
@daveg5857 16 дней назад
Put her out of your mind, Frank.
@snoote533
@snoote533 13 дней назад
It's okay little buddy
@PetarKaser
@PetarKaser 12 дней назад
Its because he says crack isnt it
@rajdeepsinhzala1886
@rajdeepsinhzala1886 12 дней назад
​@@PetarKaserno its shape of the cup 😂
@user-lz2oh9zz4y
@user-lz2oh9zz4y 17 дней назад
Water be tasting a little funky with this cup 😋
@JohnSmith-of2gu
@JohnSmith-of2gu 15 дней назад
What impresses me is how they can toss the cup to each other, with a spin, and not have the liquid splash out. It's impressive what surface tension can do without gravity opposing it.
@UnTipoSinNombre
@UnTipoSinNombre 15 дней назад
It amazes me how you always find something interesting to show
@DaveFromColorado
@DaveFromColorado 17 дней назад
A little bit off topic here, but I love the Dr Pepper shirt! Back on topic, that is really awesome to know about that cup and how it works.. I only knew kind of how it worked because I've been watching this channel for a very very long time and I truly enjoy the information I learned from it. Thank you for taking the time to film, edit, and post these videos.
@user-uz5ti7lj7r
@user-uz5ti7lj7r 15 дней назад
Back to the Dr. Pepper: Can they have carbonated drinks in space? I wonder what would happen if they tried to drink a Dr. Pepper?
@ChaseSherm
@ChaseSherm 17 дней назад
I love science!
@sirkurac3971
@sirkurac3971 17 дней назад
no u
@joedatuknow
@joedatuknow 17 дней назад
@The Action Lab thanks for the information
@mohsscale4220
@mohsscale4220 17 дней назад
When you dropped the cup, the water went up and out because of the inertia of the liquid, not because of capillary effect. Same reason water may spill out of a glass if move it sideways too fast.
@bobthegamingtaco6073
@bobthegamingtaco6073 16 дней назад
If it was unaffected by capillary action, it would've flown out in a much larger surface area, like a normal cup dropping
@karlhendrikse
@karlhendrikse 15 дней назад
The point was that it went out the pointy part, not the blobby part.
@shawn2444
@shawn2444 12 дней назад
The water and the cup are accelerating at the same rate. If the drop doesn't impart any rotation, the water and cup would experience the exact same inertial reference. Try it with a regular cup it just falls together until it stops or changes direction. The drop here isn't perfect so more water flows up than should have, however, it still illustrates the concept. As the other post said, it flows out of the pointy bit, and not the bloby but.
@DanTheMan104
@DanTheMan104 17 дней назад
I'm calling her as we speak
@ku8721
@ku8721 17 дней назад
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="178">2:58</a> That isn't orbit....it's just falling with style!!!
@DubDTube
@DubDTube 17 дней назад
This a fun science channel, really digging it thx!
@S1su
@S1su 17 дней назад
That’s why there should be spinning space stations. Bcos if they spin, and your not directly on the axis that it spins on, you feel gravity. Like in a carousel you feel sideways gravity
@johnsmithe4656
@johnsmithe4656 17 дней назад
This is shown in a lot of sci fi movies. Yes, it would work. I think the limitation is just cost and complexity. It would need to be rather strong, structurally. I'm sure something like that will be built eventually.
@Sup_Aqualine369
@Sup_Aqualine369 16 дней назад
Another problem I see with this (I may be wrong) in order to spin fast enough to make artificial gravity, you would have to spin the station extremely fast, which could cause motion sickness unless the station was really really big (again I know literally nothing about this, this is my educated guess on the subject)
@karlhendrikse
@karlhendrikse 15 дней назад
​@@Sup_Aqualine369No motion sickness, because you wouldn't feel "motion", you'd just feel gravity. As long as the station was big enough and you were far enough away from the spin axis.
@daphenomenalz4100
@daphenomenalz4100 14 дней назад
Not plausible enough to even build it bruh
@johnsmithe4656
@johnsmithe4656 14 дней назад
@@daphenomenalz4100 Why is it not plausible, "bruh"? My understanding is that it's totally plausible, just not pragmatic.
@alant779
@alant779 17 дней назад
Amazing the solutions to impossible problems that can be found in mother nature.
@xg....
@xg.... 16 дней назад
Looks like a collaboration b/w distinguished gigolos, astronaut Vladimir Sukmeov, and Kunta Kuntlicker.. 👏 bravo!
@Naademai
@Naademai 16 дней назад
This is so cool, had to see if there were versions of this available to the public and now I’m so sad there there used to be but now they no longer make the one designed for every day use
@mattg2091
@mattg2091 15 дней назад
Always love your videos! Thanks for always providing such fun interesting content! :)
@genseek00
@genseek00 17 дней назад
They should have used this shape in The Expanse series, since it is centered around space travel and is very accurate scientifically.
@Yggdrasil42
@Yggdrasil42 16 дней назад
But lots of The Expanse has artificial gravity, through constant thrust.
@genseek00
@genseek00 16 дней назад
@@Yggdrasil42 yep. Not always though. that is why the belters are very tall and cannot breath or even stand upright on Earth's surface. Gravity through thrust mostly, because it is better than artificial gravity through centrifugal force. In the latter case one got pronounced Coriolis which is very annoying as it makes the trajectories of thrown or dropped objects behave very unintuitively. Such cups still would be useful, for instance, when the ship drifts or on small asteroids.
@emmanueljustine2255
@emmanueljustine2255 17 дней назад
This guy was my modivation for science, ThankYou🙏
@mip4422
@mip4422 17 дней назад
Motivation
@FleurDeFire
@FleurDeFire 17 дней назад
@@mip4422 I've found the issue that people have with comments that correct grammar & spelling are usually because the commenter didn't bother responding to anything to person said. They just correct them. Imagine listening to another person talk, and then completely disregard what they said to correct a word they used. It's a bit unhinged.
@johnsmithe4656
@johnsmithe4656 17 дней назад
@@FleurDeFire Sure, but this is the Internet, not real life in person. In person yeah, it would be weird. On here, not so much.
@TheYahmez
@TheYahmez 17 дней назад
@@FleurDeFire Mein ißoe personal ist þ@ ðə nly reason "Grammar Nazis" X-ist ist cozov otto-crecht. Specifically "correct" spellịŋ izneigh akshəly "reol" per-se :- liŋ-which X-ists, volves & ist structus þroo clectic -mis- yooze, liŋ-istig auþoritarianism ist cult-oral constipulation & a bliʔ'pon contempwiry litter-aðuer.
@spanqueluv9er
@spanqueluv9er 17 дней назад
@emmanueljustine2255 It’s ^*motivation, never modivation ^*thank you, not ThankYou You won’t learn if you aren’t corrected. Good luck, you’re doing great with the English language, it’s quite difficult to master.👍👍🙏
@noahman27
@noahman27 17 дней назад
Great demo!!!!! Very cool. thank you.
@jeffintx
@jeffintx 15 дней назад
Amazing. Now I want to know more about that toilet.
@Rueger12
@Rueger12 17 дней назад
The shape tells the truth even if they can't
@johnsmithe4656
@johnsmithe4656 17 дней назад
It's one of those magical shapes, there's a reason we find it in nature, just like the Golden Ratio.
@Smallvillefreak
@Smallvillefreak 17 дней назад
The ISS toilet costs $19 million on earth. I can’t imagine they have a store that selling them in space.
@eafadeev
@eafadeev 17 дней назад
this toilet smells of corruption to me
@kostarak3160
@kostarak3160 17 дней назад
@@eafadeev Idk but sure is pricey
@jesseb2541
@jesseb2541 17 дней назад
well why dont they set up a walmart on the moon? save space on rockets to get supplies to wherever nasa needs
@Darsh0606
@Darsh0606 17 дней назад
@@eafadeev no, it smells of shit
@huckleberryfinn6578
@huckleberryfinn6578 17 дней назад
@@eafadeev It's obvious that the toilet doesn't cost $19 million. The research and development of this toilet does.
@galtthedestroyer
@galtthedestroyer 12 дней назад
Thanks for telling us about the listening app. That seems like a great idea. Also I loved your video.
@ZiggityPow
@ZiggityPow 14 дней назад
Astronaut inventor of this cup, Donald Pettit, is an Eagle Scout from Oregon. I recently taught my Cub Scout Den about him and this cup.
@SnakeSnack
@SnakeSnack 17 дней назад
Why am i like this
@-aid4084
@-aid4084 17 дней назад
😏
@whathefuckisthishandle
@whathefuckisthishandle 17 дней назад
@@-aid4084 please explain im so fucking confused
@panamaklz
@panamaklz 17 дней назад
​@@whathefuckisthishandle you'll learn in due time, young one...
@-aid4084
@-aid4084 16 дней назад
@@whathefuckisthishandle everyone knows it looks like a cl*tirous*
@-aid4084
@-aid4084 16 дней назад
@@whathefuckisthishandle just woke up so my brain was asleep
@znanjejemoc644
@znanjejemoc644 16 дней назад
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="72">1:12</a> Imagine a toilet that costs one-third the price of a Space X Falcon 9 rocket lol
@nerfgodbigguy1405
@nerfgodbigguy1405 14 дней назад
Imagine a toilet that costs more than : The Statue of liberty, 700 premium homes, and a Bugatti ......💀⚰️
@adamwarlock8263
@adamwarlock8263 16 дней назад
fascinating! well done
@CM-dq7fe
@CM-dq7fe 14 дней назад
Great invention! Pretty versatile as well...
@sweatyeti
@sweatyeti 16 дней назад
This episode made me grateful I don't have to poop in zero-G
@GUSTAVO_06
@GUSTAVO_06 17 дней назад
who clicked on the thumbnail just because of the cup? I know i did 😏
@valecasini
@valecasini 15 дней назад
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="83">1:23</a> FINALLY... I managed to see the ISS toilet 😂 ... now it only remains to see the Crew Dragon toilet!
@slarpychiuyan8362
@slarpychiuyan8362 17 дней назад
So cool, thank you!
@ZeroDrizzy
@ZeroDrizzy 17 дней назад
He knows what we thinking😂
@tjg555
@tjg555 17 дней назад
How do you fill the cup in space? If there's no gravity, you can't just pour liquid into it. Which pretty much brings you back to bags with straws.
@martinxvidxb
@martinxvidxb 17 дней назад
At 0:26 Step 1: Push the beverage from bag. Step 2: Move it around with table tennis racquet. Step 3: Get it in the cup. Step 4: Enjoy your zero G beverage. :)
@hadibq
@hadibq 15 дней назад
I wish I had youtube and watching the action lab when I was 6 yo.... soooo curiosity-fulfilling
@canadianobserver5552
@canadianobserver5552 13 дней назад
Hey Action Lab... i was wondering.. lately i've been into the whole survival and bushcraft scene.. and as a person with a physics interest, i was wondering if you could shed some light on Mylar... its properties.. and how to use it properly.. i see many people who keep a spaceblanket in their packs... cars, etc.. and don't know how to use them right... many expect them to reflect heat back through their sleeping gear.. using them on the outside of their sleeping bags or under them... but doesnt' mylar reflect IR light...not radiant heat.. or does a warm blanket give off IR light... what would be the most effective way to utilize Mylar to stay warm... cheers... love the vids.. you cover some very interesting phenomenon ... loved the one you painted the car in the blackest black paint... Kudos
@syndrome5372
@syndrome5372 16 дней назад
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="17">0:17</a> Who tf sticks their tounge out into the cup when they drink? 😂
@ygfs8014
@ygfs8014 17 дней назад
The overengineered cupusy
@HyonkTea
@HyonkTea 17 дней назад
before i watch the video, my guess is since there's no gravity to hold the water in the cup normally, this cup does surface tension shenanigans to keep water in, and uses adherence/coherence to help the water roll up the crack
@royehoffman
@royehoffman 15 дней назад
You could demonstrate the effect without zero gravity by using two immiscible liquids of the same density for example oil and a water alcohol mixture. Submerse the cup containing the liquid with higher surface tension in the other liquid to get the same effect as zero gravity.
@regenwurm5584
@regenwurm5584 17 дней назад
Internet has corrupted me😂.
@Revengilate
@Revengilate 5 дней назад
How come?
@muninrob
@muninrob 17 дней назад
I almost never forget that almost all of our water systems rely on gravity, that's a big part of why I so heavily advocate developing & using "spin gravity" for space missions.
@CharlieTheNerd91
@CharlieTheNerd91 16 дней назад
CORRECTION: I would avoid saying "no/zero gravity" in context of the ISS, as the ISS still feels 89% of Earth's gravity, and 89% of 9.81 is more than 0. The correct term to use is 0G, they are effectively feeling weightless because there is no atmosphere to slow their spacecraft so they move (fall around the earth) at the same speed it does. They are only weightless in the frame of refference of the ISS itself.
@HelloKittyFanMan
@HelloKittyFanMan 16 дней назад
Not having gravity doesn't cause "no down or up." You can still have your usual head position assigned as the up location, making your usual feet location as the down one, especially if there's still a recognizable ceiling and floor arrangement.
@Blackmark52
@Blackmark52 17 дней назад
[<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="83">1:23</a>] "$19 Million" *I thought I was ready for the amount.* But was out by about 18 million bucks.
@Blackmark52
@Blackmark52 17 дней назад
@@Josf-xz3hw "You are a millionaire?" Hell no. And I don't get to outer space from my bathroom. I figured NASA could easily spend a million bucks on a toilet. But 19 million?! How much would you have guessed a space toilet would cost?
@huckleberryfinn6578
@huckleberryfinn6578 17 дней назад
@@Blackmark52 Because it's a unique toilet. NASA engineers have spent most likely months or years to develop this system. That's why it's so damn expensive. The price would drop sharply if this toilet were mass-produced.
@Blackmark52
@Blackmark52 17 дней назад
@@huckleberryfinn6578 "The price would drop sharply if this toilet were mass-produced." Ya think? (But by the time you need a toilet for space travel your RV will probably cost a trillion in today's dollars -- so maybe not.)
@johnsmithe4656
@johnsmithe4656 17 дней назад
​@@Blackmark52 Imagine the implications if there were a clog.... an overflow.... a reversal of pressure.... a leak.... a crack.... a disconnect. You do NOT want that happening in Space. It's not like they can just roll the windows down and chuck all the mess outside. That would be very problematic. So yeah, it doesn't actually surprise me that $19 million was spent on toilet development. You know that our Defense Budget is $850 BILLION per year, right?
@MelodicTurtleMetal
@MelodicTurtleMetal 15 дней назад
Surely not $19 million per toilet. I'm guessing the original toilet cost $19 million to design and build. Either it wasn't made by NASA, and the licensing fees are ridiculous, or 19 million covers the r&d
@as-ng5ln
@as-ng5ln 17 дней назад
The opening has a very "interesting" shape.
@laurencejohnston2191
@laurencejohnston2191 4 дня назад
Great video as always!😂👍
@westonding8953
@westonding8953 16 дней назад
I have to watch this later.
@SharvilSawargaonkar
@SharvilSawargaonkar 17 дней назад
That shape looks familiar 😏
@MelodicTurtleMetal
@MelodicTurtleMetal 15 дней назад
... Like a gravy boat 🫠
@LowkeyAirgunner
@LowkeyAirgunner 17 дней назад
So now we can do bungee jumps and hydrate all at once! NOICE
@MrChainsawAardvark
@MrChainsawAardvark 7 дней назад
Wasn't this developed alongside a special Italian espresso machine, so astronauts could drink fresh coffee in space? I seem to remember a mention of 3d printing new mugs to go with that.
@anzaklaynimation
@anzaklaynimation 17 дней назад
I think the ISS is just meant for such ridiculous things. 😂😅
@dsan2910
@dsan2910 17 дней назад
I’m just here for the cup comments
@dimmisg
@dimmisg 17 дней назад
I have to ask because when drinking, one of the main forces that help drinking is atmospheric pressure. Gravity helps with the direction of the flow but not the ability to drink. Does that make sense?
@abriefsummaryofhistory7449
@abriefsummaryofhistory7449 17 дней назад
HR Giger would love this cup😂 reminds me of his art😅
@Duolingo5476
@Duolingo5476 17 дней назад
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="199">3:19</a> Gyyyyyyyyyyaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaattttttttttttt!!!!!!!!
@Pleyer7575lol
@Pleyer7575lol 13 дней назад
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
@booradley4237
@booradley4237 16 дней назад
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="37">0:37</a> hot
@peamister2173
@peamister2173 17 дней назад
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="189">3:09</a> is SOOO satisfying
@user-lb3jw6jk1s
@user-lb3jw6jk1s 15 дней назад
We have all seen Chemist Tracy Caldwell on the Nasa channel a few years ago hosting with Don Pettit. The Space Cup is the Pettit cup. Named after astronaut Don Pettit who invented the cup. Tracy is best known gazing through the newly installed cupola.
@DanielM-uj4km
@DanielM-uj4km 17 дней назад
Cuppusy
@degariuslozak2169
@degariuslozak2169 16 дней назад
Looks like a hybrid of a cuo and a gravy boat
@EleyReiHer
@EleyReiHer 14 дней назад
It is an intriguing classical shape
@FailZord
@FailZord 17 дней назад
The best shape for surface tension :D
@KevinBoys
@KevinBoys 17 дней назад
SO COOL!
@deathsoulger1
@deathsoulger1 17 дней назад
I've was thinking about water holding mechanisms for zero G factory's. This cup is a great idea. I wonder how you can stop water loss from splashing in sudden immersion in a larger 1000 L volume of water
@TheAkeem11688
@TheAkeem11688 8 дней назад
These are going to be all sci-fi from now on you’re going to be able to date what year this cup was invented and when writer star added it in their sci-fi very cool cup would’ve never thought of it but never going to forget it.
@hidazip
@hidazip 16 дней назад
I was hoping for you to pull out some kind of gravity chamber.
@KiranKankipati
@KiranKankipati 12 дней назад
fantastic video, very scientific and addressing a fundamental need those who are in orbit and in deep space (in future) 😇
@naominekomimi
@naominekomimi 17 дней назад
Quick correction. The force of gravity doesn't drop to zero in freefall, it's the normal force which drops to zero. Free fall is defined as a state of acceleration in which the only notable force is weight (gravity).
@johnsmithe4656
@johnsmithe4656 17 дней назад
What "normal force"?
@tylerxr
@tylerxr 17 дней назад
​@@johnsmithe4656like the ground pushing up on you
@johnsmithe4656
@johnsmithe4656 16 дней назад
@@tylerxr .......................
@CJ-ht4rf
@CJ-ht4rf 16 дней назад
What i love a straw! Space capri suns every day? Sign me up
@darrennew8211
@darrennew8211 17 дней назад
Now I want to know where to get the STL for the space cup.
@ichwillzaster
@ichwillzaster 17 дней назад
could you provide the STL for this cup? I want some spacecups to use on earth and have something to talk about when ppl come over lol
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