for those who don't know, neutrinos are these stupidly small ridiculous particles which can pass through matter without touching a few atoms, hundreds of billions of them pass through our body every second and since they rarely ever interact with matter, it's very hard to detect them. One way to detect them is filling a stupidly large room with soapy water with sensors everywhere, when a neutrino interacts with the water in the tank, it produces a trail which is detected by the sensors, it's one of the biggest breakthroughs of modern physics and is actually very amazing and interesing. And also, y'all wanna stop asking absolutely stupid ass ridiculous questions ?! It's annoying now..
while their size does play a huge part, the reasons they don’t often interact with matter has more to do with them having an incredibly minuscule amount of mass (so hardly any gravitational interaction), as well as having no charge. also i believe the number of neutrinos that pass through your body every second is closer to *_hundreds of trillions!_* such fascinating little particles
@@mihirpanchal8998 they’re making one underground because neutrinos have such a small interaction with particles they can travel through the whole earth
Funny, but I thought that there might be 'someone' building a hide-away ... because his buddies built bunkers just like Zark Muckerberg & his criminal friends.
If they are working to create for "Godzilla monster" which is shooting "Japanizing Beams" from their Hollow Mountain. We must send "King Kong's Ice-Cream Missiles" and sell the mountain to theyselfs again!" -Joe Biden
“The pyramids is such a crazy concept! How could that possibly exist?” Imagine finding a fucking hollowed out MOUNTAIN that is filled with METAL OBJECTS?!??
You need a better understanding of TECHNOLOGY. Even by TODAYS standards, the construction of the Great Pyramid is still unbelievable to most engineers. Especially the time of construction, location, population, and technology used. It's a marvel for a reason. Digging with boring machines and placing thousands of 15 tonne blocks are completely different tasks.
@@NukelearFalloutthe assumption that I don’t understand this crazy. I make my statement because I DO understand. We have our own pyramids, that we are taking for granted because we have people explaining to us how it happens. The logistics of a project of this magnitude is insane.
@@OhsoLosoo We build technologies to do this stuff solely for our ease. Same with programing AI to create apps that otherwise would be difficult for most to achieve. Using a boring machine is a lot different than creating the biggest ancient human structure known to man. Block for block, with geologically phenomenal accuracy. Including its allignment with a certain (Forgot the word for things like Orion's belt lol)
Always so FRICKING cool to see people talking about particle physics. My university is a collaborator with this project and I personally know people working on the Kamiokande and omg it's so cool
So you know why this is happening then?? What is possible if the neutrino is found to interact?? Other than confirmation of existance like the colidor, if I recall they travel 60 nanoseconds faster than light 🤔
Well, the water is kept constantly ultrapure using by filtering, UV sterilisation, and what not. Look for more info about SuperKamiokande in Internet, it is really cool device both technology and science point of view.
@@Sandmansands55time travel is very possible, but it’s such a terrifying thing that I doubt anybody does it or is trying to do it, they can easily destroy the world with one mistake
@@climbingaddiction4823 I wasn’t arguing, I was just saying that it’s possible but not in the Hollywood movie sense, once you go into the machine there will then be infinite versions of you traveling in more timelines than there were before, and they can conflict with eachother, one change in a timeline can change everything we know or can destroy earth
@@9PndHammer Thats hollywood my guy. The only time travel thats "Theoretically" possible (and plausible) is to move very fast or nearby very strong gravity...
Whoa this video was awesome! I love Japan and it’s so cool learning more about Tokyo, especially the history and maps! Your videos are so well put together, and the visuals are superb!👌
They are continuing on with Dr. Hideki Yukawa’s experiment on the neutrino, later continued by Prof. Frederick Reines who was posthumously awarded the Nobel for his work. Yukawa was the first Japanese to win the Nobel, incidentally.
I assume you're making fun of people who theories over the pyramids and how they were built. The thing is, there's no proof of advanced technology. on that note, barely any tools were found.
@@thewitchesfix Giant robots piloted by a person inside, like the ones in pacific rim and Power rangers. Japan practically invented that genre for shows and movies
The more I hear of these huge projects going on around the world, the more I think of a Minecraft survival world where everyone is in there own space making different stuff. Some things to help themselves, some to help the whole server as a whole, and some just being silly 😂
There is one of these in Sudbury, Ontario, Canada. They are filled with heavy water. The one in sudbury was opened in 1998 and shut down in November 2006.
I come from a country with no mountains. When living in Japan, they were the most fascinanting thing to me. When you cross from Hyogo prefecture to Osaka, there is a several several minutes tunnel inside a mountain range, it was completely unreal to me.
An sculptor named Chillida wanted to do the same in Fuerteventura (Spain) the place is called Mt Tindaya, but the locals refused since Mt Tindaya is a natural monument filled with remains from the Guanches , is kinda like a natural Necropolis
It's not just filled with "water", it's filled with absolutely pure water which is corrosive in some way and their little boat must be made of certain materials to not be corroded by the pure water. It's like the water, by exclusively containing H2O, is hungry for minerals and metals.
The book Neutrino by Frank Close is a great smallish book on the topic of Neutrino's and why these style of detectors is needed. (Massive underground water tanks essentially.) For example, they need to be hidden from cosmic rays, hence the mountain in this scenario! But the book goes in to great detail our first discovery and how long that took even though we knew their was some particle undiscovered for several decades prior. But each step along the discovery path opened up new information and helped develop our understanding of the particles themselves as well as certain types of nucleor decay/radiation. Very interesting book even without a physics/mathematical background.
@@XERXESDOE Why those countries for comparison? Do Nigeria or Greenland have a giant neutrino observatory nobody's talking about? I'd argue that Japan is up there with Germany and France when it comes to scientific contribution. Just because you don't hear about them as much as the US or China doesn't mean they don't contribute to scientific endeavors.
@@TripNBallsGaming JOKE (noun) 1 a : something said or done to provoke laughter especially : a brief oral narrative with a climactic humorous twist b (1) : the humorous or ridiculous element in something (2) : an instance of jesting : KIDDING 2 : something not to be taken seriously : a trifling matter Obviously I didn’t mean Nigeria or Greenland has one, or is at the cutting edge of science. It’s also not a new concept. Japan is far from being at the top, they are however pretty good at using others ideas…
The largest neutrino telescope is actually the IceCube neutrino observatory, which is a cubic kilometer size set of thousands of detectors buried under 1.5 km of ice on the south pole. I recently attended a lecture by a scientist working there, Francis Halzen.
Wow...thank you for this informative comment...there has been much speculation on the " secret" goings on...and construction projects at the Pole...perhaps this is related 😉😲
he should have just made them like, abstract concepts like numbers or things that are completely impossible to destroy like reality itself or things that are literally impossible to find like random grains of sand on some random beach somewhere, not extremely obvious, well known magical objects
That is pretty cool. But I still wish they wanted to recreate Spectre’s secret volcano base which was seen in You Only Live Twice. That rocket launching pad and monorail was sweet.
Japanese engineering is nothing special. Their greatest talent is taking technology that already exists and polishing it further, but they’re not natural innovators.
Japan is trying to follow what they learned in Antarctica. Look for the patents related to this tech. It is a sophisticated device once completed. It will do as described. Also, it's a weapon. Please read all materials associated with this Technologies Patents before reflecting negative things back (I just wanted everyone to know the truth) it is quite a read, but DARPA won't let anyone be bored. So Godzilla's hiding spot is nearly accurate 🤔 😅
@@ChAirBorneRangerdoes it have military applications? Yes. Will we be able to use it for that? Not within our lifetime. Just because DARPA finds military/defence applications for certain research does not mean we have to ability to use it as a weapon. DARPA has abandoned hundreds of research projects, not because they have no military application, but because the cost outweighs the benefits. According to the reports it looks like this project will be one of those. This is only a photon collector. In order to store energy and power a focused beam like they describe, we would have to invest decades if not centuries of R&D into this. Which isnt feasible for a military budget. So yes it can be used as a weapon, as any technology can. But that's not what they're doing with it.
@@arronbenit5660 they're photo multiplier tubes though they just amplify the signal. There are no weapon applications you can apply this to that I can fathom. I've worked on these types of experiments before, but this one isn't even using an accelerator or anything this is just pure detection equipment
We have one in Canada but we just used an abandoned mine. The SNOLAB. Sudbury Neutrino Observatory. There's a documentary about the people that work there. Takes forever just to get down the elevator.
@@d4clovetrain900doesnt matter, the dude above claimed creativity. obviously this is still freaking cool, but OPs comment is lame as hell. just a random string of words in hope of generating upvotes, it reads like a tweet.