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Making SOLID Nitrogen! 

Veritasium
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What happens when you decrease the pressure around a liquid? It boils. Water boils at room temperature once the pressure is low enough. What is interesting is that this decreases the temperature of the liquid. The fastest molecules escape, leaving the slower ones behind.
Using this trick with liquid nitrogen, it is possible to create solid nitrogen at a temperature of -210C. We then poured the solid and liquid nitrogen mixture onto a tray of water. The surface of the water became so cold that CO2 solidified out of the atmosphere on its surface. Then, since CO2 does not pass through the liquid phase at atmospheric pressure, it was propelled on the water surface by jets of gas as it sublimed.
Huge thanks to the Palais de la Decouverte.
Music by Kevin MacLeod of Incompetech.com (Mirage)

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23 сен 2012

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Комментарии : 3,3 тыс.   
@JohnDoe_69
@JohnDoe_69 9 лет назад
That French man is SO into science that I'm happy for him.
@dev.tirebit
@dev.tirebit 9 лет назад
OH MY FLAVOURS reminded me of myself when i was 12... that's not a bad thing i wish i can be so into science like i was then.
@user-ij2qz8cv8y
@user-ij2qz8cv8y 9 лет назад
+Iam Anonymous I was into sleeping when I was 12
@homurafisure4090
@homurafisure4090 8 лет назад
+Jackass Kitten I was into Pokemon. There is still no Nitrogen pokemon
@Wanted_Tiger
@Wanted_Tiger 7 лет назад
Urf what are u doing here , get ready for tomorrow, but i can't come play with u :(
@John-ec5hz
@John-ec5hz 7 лет назад
He looks like french Bill Nye
@sadik.oagile6779
@sadik.oagile6779 8 лет назад
This French man's happiness is contagious! I was just dying with laughter when he was like "Regardes! Regardes!"
@multimapping8303
@multimapping8303 8 лет назад
+Sadie Oagile :,) it's pretty moving actually!
@Fenix-fg6cs
@Fenix-fg6cs 8 лет назад
regarde *
@masacatior
@masacatior 8 лет назад
Bravo!
@braindamage5652
@braindamage5652 8 лет назад
+fenix 1999 regardez*
@Fenix-fg6cs
@Fenix-fg6cs 8 лет назад
+Braindamage "regarde" he said. because "tu regardes " but with imparative form you write "regarde" without "s". "regardez " is for someone that's not your friend. but here, they are friend and you can heard "regarde" and not "regardez".
@thebonesaw..4634
@thebonesaw..4634 8 лет назад
The things I love the most about this video are the childlike wonder on the face of the scientist performing the nitrogen experiment and the excitement of his voice. There's a man who genuinely loves his job.
@sillybilly414
@sillybilly414 8 лет назад
very true and admirable indeed
@theacorn7240
@theacorn7240 7 лет назад
I'm
@ZeroSTF
@ZeroSTF 7 лет назад
never trust a french guy. thats what tf2 has taught me
@DeadChannel939
@DeadChannel939 7 лет назад
I loved the "PLUMA! PLUMA! PLUMA! PLUMA!" Part, it was great.
@Koozomec
@Koozomec 7 лет назад
+Undamned He shout "Plus bas !" that mean "lower" to direct the cameraman.
9 лет назад
I speak french and it's just so cool to hear how the professor is amazed and enthusiastic about all that :D
@KayzokuGaming
@KayzokuGaming 8 лет назад
+Andréa et Valentin speedcubing Definetely, my physic teacher would not be like "oh c'est rigolooo" :')
@HunterRosiere
@HunterRosiere 8 лет назад
+Andréa et Valentin speed cubing My science teacher would speak in monotone, Oh, thats sort of interesting. BACK TO THE TEXT BOOK KIDS. WILLIAM TURN AROUND. THATS A PHONECALL HOME
@KayzokuGaming
@KayzokuGaming 8 лет назад
Sit properly YOU SON OF A BITCH
@multimapping8303
@multimapping8303 8 лет назад
+XxDerp HunterxX Hahaha :D
@TKEPulse
@TKEPulse 8 лет назад
+Andréa et Valentin speedcubing Le fait d'entendre du français dans cette vidéo m'a surpris !
@veritasium
@veritasium 10 лет назад
I think this might be saying the same thing in a different way. The fastest molecules carry away the energy with them.
@n.sangamithra4483
@n.sangamithra4483 4 года назад
Will the weight of liquid nitrogen in the tube eventually reduce if we continue the process of reducing pressure??
@pankazpankaz4625
@pankazpankaz4625 4 года назад
@@n.sangamithra4483 yes, until that point of time when all the liquid nitrogen becomes solid
@pankazpankaz4625
@pankazpankaz4625 4 года назад
During last two minutes the background music is so beautiful and satisfying Can you give me the link please
@mozkitolife5437
@mozkitolife5437 3 года назад
...because they are not imparting their kinetic energy on the rest of the molecules and instead moved in a direction by random chance that allowed them to escape into the air.
@RyanGoertz916
@RyanGoertz916 3 года назад
you should pin this comment so it is at the top
@EnigmaGameMaster
@EnigmaGameMaster 8 лет назад
It's so nice to understand both English and French! :D And the French guy really loves his job, it's awesome! :DDD
@ShadowKick32
@ShadowKick32 8 лет назад
+Enigma Yeah you're right !
@tompievermaas5538
@tompievermaas5538 8 лет назад
I wish I had that ability
@astaa4474
@astaa4474 8 лет назад
ouais il aime son travaille p.s.: i speak both language too :p
@benjaminpatterson3535
@benjaminpatterson3535 8 лет назад
+Tompie Vermaas most of us don't realize what a gift it is to have bilingual parents or eaven trilingual parents.
@EnigmaGameMaster
@EnigmaGameMaster 8 лет назад
ben patterson I was born in Québec, a French Canadian Province. My parents and everyone I knew were not bilingual. I learned English by myself by playing video games, watching videos and going onto online forums.
@hologrampizza5432
@hologrampizza5432 9 лет назад
Fun fact! Nitrogen ice is found on the surface of Pluto!
@BradTheThird
@BradTheThird 9 лет назад
+Hologrampizza Quite possibly for the exact same reason explained in this video. Wow, your comment just got my mind racing and stuff I've read about Pluto suddenly made perfect sense... ooh, I'm all excited now.
@JohannaMueller57
@JohannaMueller57 8 лет назад
+BradTheThird you mean because there was a huge decrease in pressure causing something to boil and thereby cooling nitrogen?
@kanesaka
@kanesaka 8 лет назад
Such fun very fact wow
@dchandula9060
@dchandula9060 8 лет назад
+Hologrampizza yay let's go to pluto!
@EddyKorgo
@EddyKorgo 8 лет назад
+Hologrampizza just imagine we could use solid nitrogen to power steam turbine. possible?
@UrAwsome55
@UrAwsome55 9 лет назад
I guess that you could say solid nitrogen is N-ice (nice)
@bacon.cheesecake
@bacon.cheesecake 9 лет назад
solid nitrogen is really COOL.
@bacon.cheesecake
@bacon.cheesecake 9 лет назад
***** you just need to CHILL.
@boodab8209
@boodab8209 9 лет назад
BA DUM TSSSSSSSSSSS!!!!!!!!!!
@r0bz0rly
@r0bz0rly 9 лет назад
boooo
@joshbautista99
@joshbautista99 9 лет назад
That's very punny.
@DJbassrevolution
@DJbassrevolution 10 лет назад
I love how the french guy was so enthusiastic and exited by something he has probably seen a few times. He is the kind of person that more people should be like, someone who genuinely loves what he does.
@bluezz5002
@bluezz5002 3 года назад
@Prakhar Chaturvedi there are literal subtitles what are u even talking about
@BierBart12
@BierBart12 2 года назад
@@bluezz5002 The subs don't really mediate what he is actually saying. I got excited just listening to him being so excited, despite not even knowing any french
@SulfixX
@SulfixX 2 года назад
They’re not far off the original
@leonardokim
@leonardokim 8 лет назад
Really love the genuine excitement of that french scientist (doctor/professor?)
@leonardokim
@leonardokim 7 лет назад
The spy?
@ZeroSTF
@ZeroSTF 7 лет назад
+Thiago Leo Kim shpee*
@MrA16R
@MrA16R 7 лет назад
lol
@SotiCoto
@SotiCoto 8 лет назад
Oh man... that French guy is so classy! He totally makes this video.
@skywayminicabs6292
@skywayminicabs6292 4 года назад
never mind the science dig the cool french guy , maybe that why there's not more female scientists
@faramen8422
@faramen8422 3 года назад
Sometimes people say, that "If you're in to science, you know so much, that it takes wonder out of everything. When you understand things, they're not so magical anymore." These guys show, that when you understand a lot of things, you can do SO MUCH MORE and the magic is not lost.
@bigdaveoncampus
@bigdaveoncampus 10 лет назад
A true scientist there, getting excited over something he's probably done before and knew was going to happen!
@Trithis2077
@Trithis2077 8 лет назад
This may be the coolest video on youtube. No pun intended.
@d34thiseternal
@d34thiseternal 8 лет назад
Nah, don't lie. You meant the pun. Admit it. Lol.
@crazysquirrel879
@crazysquirrel879 7 лет назад
Don't worry you can admit I will keep my cool don't worry
@sugandhakohli
@sugandhakohli 7 лет назад
Trithis not cool man
@Djorgal
@Djorgal 7 лет назад
It gave me the chills.
@adityamenon
@adityamenon 10 лет назад
Did you ever see someone *refrigerate* water by *boiling* it?
@scottyc3215
@scottyc3215 10 лет назад
That's just too cool.
@the1exnay
@the1exnay 10 лет назад
no but i heard egyptians refrigerated water, even making ice, by putting straw on top (i think) and putting it where the wind would blow through and therefore evaporate it and since evaporation is endothermic it would cool it. in fact all changes of states of matter are endothermic or exothermic, if it goes to a higher energy state such as liquid from solid, or gas from liquid it is endothermic. if it goes to a lower energy state such as liquid from gas or solid from liquid it is exothermic
@thudthedestroyer515
@thudthedestroyer515 10 лет назад
Firaro There is a little more to it. There is an inner and outer chamber that are concentric. The outer ring chamber has sand in it and the inner ring chamber has the area that will cool off. Water is poured in the outer chamber and the inner chambered is covered by straw so that it is insulated by the sun. As the water evaporates from the outer chamber it pulls heat from the inner chamber which cools it.
@Mephistolomaniac
@Mephistolomaniac 10 лет назад
Firaro my favorite thing i learned today ;D thanks
@thudthedestroyer515
@thudthedestroyer515 10 лет назад
Mephistolomaniac Yup! Agreed, my friend! However, I think I will continue to use the fridge or just a frosty-cold-one" at the bar down the street!
@cuteCathy123
@cuteCathy123 9 лет назад
I'm so happy for that adorable french scientist :)
@andrejsasd8904
@andrejsasd8904 3 года назад
Sometimes people say, that "If you're in to science, you know so much, that it takes wonder out of everything. When you understand things, they're not so magical anymore." These guys show, that when you understand a lot of things, you can do SO MUCH MORE and the magic is not lost.
@lmarsh5407
@lmarsh5407 Год назад
I like to say, the more you know, the more you know you don't know. There is always room for learning
@zinzolin14
@zinzolin14 10 лет назад
Teehee, that French guy was so excited it's adorable
@KushPatel
@KushPatel 10 лет назад
Loved the French Professor! He's just as amazed as I was!
@nonyabeeswax9202
@nonyabeeswax9202 10 лет назад
He seemed genuinely entertained and intrigued by his own subject, I wish more professors were like that. 'specially in high school.
@purpleease7081
@purpleease7081 9 лет назад
I am french and i was in this exact room something like 1 year ago, i'm amazed to see this video. I don't really remember but i think the teacher is the same. The whole presentation length is something like 30 minutes, sometimes the teacher throws some things on the ground, it seems like little rocks but it's nitrogen at very low temperature. This takes place in Palais de la Découverte, in paris, i recommend !
@djr5995
@djr5995 8 лет назад
Great video!! I just want to point out one thing though. That was DEFINITELY NOT CO2 at the end. Instead it was from the solid nitrogen they made. My reasoning is as follows: 1. Dry ice (AKA frozen carbon dioxide) sinks. It does not float on water. If you are uncertain about this I'm sure there are probably heaps of RU-vid videos showing it. [Frankly, this is all you need to know that wasn't dry ice] 2. Liquid carbon dioxide only occurs under containment, if it is open to the atmosphere it will instantly become gaseous, you would never just watch it bubble away 3. Dry ice in contact with cooled water would not sublimate into gas that fast, but when you watch the floating piece of [nitrogen] ice the gas is shooting off it 4. Carbon dioxide is heavier than air so the gas will 'pool' more than what you see in the video. instead the gas is shooting up and away more easily, it still is somewhat heavier than air but that is because the nitrogen is still so cold 5. Carbon dioxide makes up only around 400 parts per million in air. There's no way that enough carbon dioxide from the air came into contact with the water / liquid nitrogen bath to make a big lump like that. Especially when nitrogen gas is pouring outwardly from the bath and pushing away the air What we saw was due to the solid piece of nitrogen that was clearly floating in the liquid nitrogen before it got poured into the water bath. The warmth from the water half melted it but, as it bubbled away, it cooled more and more [just like the 'boiling resulting in cooling' explanation at the start of the video] until it became solid again [albeit now a much smaller piece]
@djr5995
@djr5995 8 лет назад
Anyways it looks awesome. That's what matters
@jrvillarreals8257
@jrvillarreals8257 8 лет назад
Your completely wrong
@LongNguyen-pv9sm
@LongNguyen-pv9sm 8 лет назад
i don't think so, it's true that solid co2 don't float, the difference in temperature help it float, it's a weird physic phenomenon, because the difference in temperature is so much, the solid co2 turn to gas incredible fast, so fast that it create a kinda of "rocket engine", push it self out Ps: i knew this because of a sci-fi movie used this phenomenon in battle
@djr5995
@djr5995 8 лет назад
Long Nguyen You contradict yourself. Either a piece of dry ice that big floats or doesn't, and trust me it would not. Also, the water would obviously still be quite cool so the temperature difference would not be enough to make vapor release from dry ice so fast. I have spent plenty of time messing about with dry ice and I have never seen it shooting out like that. The only reason it shoots out so fast is because of the great temperature difference between the water and *solid nitrogen.* A MUCH greater difference than for cool water and dry ice.
@marcsomerhausen1926
@marcsomerhausen1926 7 лет назад
"Either a piece of dry ice that big floats or doesn't, and trust me it would not." First of, no. If there was no leidenfrost effect messing the surface of the water, then it would float by sheer surface tension(the same way you can make a metallic coin rest on top of a water surface if you're stable enough balancing it). But there is a leidenfrost effect and that alone it enough to justify it floating. This is not a solid chunk of CO2, this is a thin sheet full of holes. "so the temperature difference would not be enough to make vapor release from dry ice so fast. " It is enough. Just look at the fog released. This thin sheet of liquid nitrogen has not much mass but a lot of surface to exchange heat.
@alemutasa6189
@alemutasa6189 7 лет назад
Triple point experiments are my favourite lab experience ever. Reading temperatures and constructing the graphs was one of the coolest things I did
@Djorgal
@Djorgal 7 лет назад
The more it boils the more it congeals... brilliant.
@akramzakriti9909
@akramzakriti9909 8 лет назад
nitrogin is so cool literally
@ShadowPegasi
@ShadowPegasi 8 лет назад
+Akram Zakriti Oh my god...
@jasonmiraze6915
@jasonmiraze6915 4 года назад
Nitrogin can make UFOs
@mattheck6470
@mattheck6470 4 года назад
This is actually one of my favorites that you've done. Doing experiments with enthusiastic scientists from abroad would be a great theme for you to continue with.
@robertmegee9052
@robertmegee9052 3 года назад
Since I've retired I've been trying to learn French. Reading is going quite well, but this it the actual first time that I have understood spoken French outside of the lessons on Duolingo. Just another reason to enjoy this episode. C'est magnifique !
@TheCalvinCheung
@TheCalvinCheung 10 лет назад
I just found this youtuber, but he makes science much more interesting !
@evilakah1
@evilakah1 10 лет назад
Me too!! I found this channel on Friday and i spent the entire weekend watching the videos!! :D
@trashboi-bk
@trashboi-bk 10 лет назад
You are in for a wonderful ride my friends. Be sure to check out 2veritasium as well. :D Amazing stuff. (Calvin C Rayyan Memon ***** )
@FULLAWESOMENESS12
@FULLAWESOMENESS12 9 лет назад
If this was a potato, it would be a good potato.
@artofjamaa2090
@artofjamaa2090 9 лет назад
What if it was a pohtahtoh
@nickzamora223
@nickzamora223 9 лет назад
I bet that would be an excellent potato...
@Bobany
@Bobany 9 лет назад
my life is potato
@32beckam
@32beckam 9 лет назад
No. It would be a Cool Potato!
@MouseGoat
@MouseGoat 9 лет назад
Bobany potato is life.
@ITpanda
@ITpanda 3 года назад
I love rewatching some of your older videos. It like a refresher course in between new releases.
@fredtaylor9792
@fredtaylor9792 3 года назад
This is one of the coolest science demonstrations i've ever seen. Thank you!
@thiagodantas7979
@thiagodantas7979 7 лет назад
That guy love his work.
@DavidRothwellAdWords
@DavidRothwellAdWords 10 лет назад
Compulsive and Passionate Physics! A huge thank-you to Veritasium and collaborators for making this possible and sharing with us. I was scared the tube in the experiment might explode in the low temperatures. How about the physics of some more "Extreme Elements" like Phosphorous, Magnesium, Sodium, Potassium, Caesium ...?? More! More! and More!
@vicegirlsusa
@vicegirlsusa 10 лет назад
***** Who cares who you salute? I salute Capt. Crunch but you don't see me making comments about it all of the time. Except for this time.
@vicegirlsusa
@vicegirlsusa 10 лет назад
***** If you don't know what I've written, what are you replying to?
@Rom1morvels
@Rom1morvels 10 лет назад
I've seen those experiments in this exact room at the Palais de la Decouverte when I was a child ! Now I'm doing science in Australia and I remember that time, thanks Derek !!!
@TatysWyldeRide
@TatysWyldeRide 9 лет назад
I'm in AP chemistry right now and this pertained to the unit we just finished learning. So cool!
@TheyCallMeLeafy
@TheyCallMeLeafy 3 года назад
At our work, I think they work with the same stuff. Inside the fridges that they used to transport, some bags of solid nitrogen can be found. I remember sometimes for fun, picking the bag up, filling up the sink and then just put all that stuff in their. And suddenly, you have smoke everywhere. it's so fun xD
@akkudakkupl
@akkudakkupl 10 лет назад
Thermodynamics 101: - thermodynamics are hard (I'm looking at you integral equations!) - thermodynamics are cool (it's a pun if you didn't catch that)
@chocolate_squiggle
@chocolate_squiggle 3 года назад
That was amazing, much better than the video title hinted at :-) I've only ever experienced -8C. These temps seem unimaginable to me. The CO2 dry ice, rock and geysers were all so awesome.
@emmetthowell9265
@emmetthowell9265 5 лет назад
I know so many people have said it already but it makes his seem even more enthusiastic to be able to understand it in both French and English it’s just generally cool to hear how excited he is about it and I hope to have that sort of enthusiasm in my life
@user-kh5tv9rb6y
@user-kh5tv9rb6y 9 лет назад
The guy in the background at 1:52 is really creepy...
@JohannaMueller57
@JohannaMueller57 8 лет назад
+794613825a said a number on the internet
@unlimitedninjavideos7004
@unlimitedninjavideos7004 8 лет назад
+794613825a i agree
@unlimitedninjavideos7004
@unlimitedninjavideos7004 8 лет назад
+794613825a his smile
@jasonrowe7281
@jasonrowe7281 8 лет назад
He's just there watching
@unlimitedninjavideos7004
@unlimitedninjavideos7004 8 лет назад
Ender Livings Creeply smiling :p
@NuclearFall404
@NuclearFall404 10 лет назад
Beautiful. Simply beautiful.
@pollacksify
@pollacksify 8 лет назад
I love how these guys are so into it - the older guy was so enthusiastic... wish i could love something that much!
@ineedmoneysp
@ineedmoneysp 10 лет назад
This was an awesome video. I never saw solid nitrogen before. Amazing.
@manas1025
@manas1025 3 года назад
If teachers taught us like this, everyone would be interested in chemistry
@acasualviewer5861
@acasualviewer5861 2 года назад
true .. everybody thinks chemistry is going to be fun but then the bad teaching starts it's a pity because unlike other subjects you often have an eager audience. Just give them what they want
@4m4n40
@4m4n40 8 лет назад
Lol that guy staring, sitting on the chair, with his creepy smile.
@akhilachu34
@akhilachu34 3 года назад
This gave me an idea on the actual relation between the atmospheric pressure and boiling point.
@sunnydayssandytoes4337
@sunnydayssandytoes4337 5 лет назад
That was really really amazing. Things I've never heard of or seen before. The joy the French man oozed of his love for science was palpable and infectious.
@lahaine8026
@lahaine8026 10 лет назад
Another AWASOME video!
@TheReaverOfDarkness
@TheReaverOfDarkness 9 лет назад
0:28 incorrect explanation: the water temperature decreases because the water goes to a higher energy state when it goes to gas phase. That physical reaction is endothermic, meaning it absorbs heat energy. That's why water on your stovetop won't heat past 100ºC: it is being cooled by the boiling, and that process sets it at an equilibrium.
@alvinakawijaya5694
@alvinakawijaya5694 9 лет назад
ure answer is good but i think ure talkin in terms of energy he is talkin in terms of preassure........i dunno what im talkin aboot i suck at physicsXD
@alvinakawijaya5694
@alvinakawijaya5694 9 лет назад
O BTW my law professor always told me to have a legal basis for my argument.... its not legal but pressure affects mollecule..........right? :S
@TheReaverOfDarkness
@TheReaverOfDarkness 9 лет назад
Alvin Akawijaya No, he said that the faster-moving molecules (implying the warmer molecules) are the ones that get out. They're all moving about the same speed, especially any right next to each other. The act of going to gas phase causes an individual molecule to absorb heat energy from other molecules around it.
@shanewilson3653
@shanewilson3653 9 лет назад
TheReaverOfDarkness Reaver is correct. This is the fundamentals behind the operation of you're refrigerator, freezer, or A/C system, They evaporate a fluid under "low" pressure to absorb "heat" energy from there surroundings (eg. in you're fridge) and then condense the vapor back to fluid where the heat energy is dissipated or radiated (at the rear outside panel of you're fridge). This means as The Reaver is correct the video's explanation is miss-leading Also if you increase the pressure you raise the freezing point so using water as an example at one giga pascal (145038PSI) water will freeze at approx 20'c. so in theory under enough pressure nitrogen will do the same however the pressure required would be astronomical
@chrispowell4870
@chrispowell4870 9 лет назад
There are two things causing this, first is the ideal gas law Pressure*Volume=N(amount of gas)*R(gas constant)*Temperature. When you keep the volume constant and reduce the pressure of a gas, the only thing that can change is the temperature, which decreases with a lower pressure and increases with higher pressure. Another good observation for the ideal gas law is to put a balloon in the freezer and see what happens to the size. The second thing in action here is the latent heat of fusion/vapor, water is a good example and the latent heat of fusion(energy required to convert 1 gram of water from solid to liquid) is 334 Joules. The latent heat of vapor for water requires 2230 Joules to convert 1 gram of liquid water to vapor/gas, and the opposite holds true, 1 gram of steam has to give off 2230 Joules to get back to liquid state and has to give off 334 Joules to get to solid state. So in this example if you put water in a vacuum and get it boiling at or below room temperature, the water that is going from liquid to gas is taking 2230 Joules/gram of energy from the rest of the water to do so. A quick side-note about Joules... just to put it in a better perspective as to how much energy it is. 1 watt is 1 Joule per second, assuming you have a 1000 watt microwave that transfers all 1000 watts to the object being cooked, it would take just over 4 seconds for the microwave to increase the temperature of a liter or kilogram water by 1 degree Celsius.
@sebastiandasilva22
@sebastiandasilva22 8 лет назад
i love how passionate whoever demonstrated this was about it all. how much he appreciated the really beautiful dry ice phenomenon. :)
@KingOfTheEngineers
@KingOfTheEngineers 9 лет назад
I CANNOT believe that you had a vacuum on that glass tube while it was cold enough to solidify N2. I thought for sure it would crack. Very nice and interesting exp!
@ArStarSSBM
@ArStarSSBM 8 лет назад
now make solid helium
@geometromancer6159
@geometromancer6159 8 лет назад
solid hydrogon
@Angel_Bob_
@Angel_Bob_ 8 лет назад
+CrafterBros0 good one
@zr0w3n-16
@zr0w3n-16 8 лет назад
Make solid water
@ArStarSSBM
@ArStarSSBM 8 лет назад
+Gamer Zeke that sir, would be an extreme feat
@Ryan-sn7fq
@Ryan-sn7fq 8 лет назад
+CrafterBros0 Solid helium can't exist in 1 atmosphere pressure, it only exists in pressures greater than about 24 atmosphere pressures. It would be really hard to do.
@DaFeMaiden
@DaFeMaiden 8 лет назад
dealing with liquid nitrogen with no gloves, I didn't choose the thug life, the thug life chose me.
@Amethysthumphries
@Amethysthumphries 7 лет назад
that got me on the edge of my seat in awe ! Although every matter has its different states, I never really thought about CO2 or liquid nitrogen in solid form! Let alone seeing it ... That was awesome...
@gauravnightchargers
@gauravnightchargers 9 лет назад
Wow...your channel really clears the misconceptions.
@BigBoyLies
@BigBoyLies 8 лет назад
this is so cool....literally...
@mjeffe
@mjeffe 10 лет назад
This is very cool !!!! Literally
@julieg3306
@julieg3306 10 лет назад
Freeze frame!
@user-re4pi4kq2e
@user-re4pi4kq2e 7 лет назад
I love how excited the french man is about this!! We need more people like him!
@kirillkamudo8575
@kirillkamudo8575 9 лет назад
Very cool video, thank you for making it.
@lickadsplit3317
@lickadsplit3317 10 лет назад
2:06 - the face of a man who truly loves being a scientist
@freddy4136
@freddy4136 10 лет назад
Science is so cool
@therealdemen247
@therealdemen247 10 лет назад
Your picture makes that look so sarcastic.
@therealdemen247
@therealdemen247 9 лет назад
***** It used to be Bert's face, being all serious as it usually was.
@fredrichodie
@fredrichodie 6 лет назад
I love those early videos where people in them have such nerdgasm :D
@MrGfgtgr2
@MrGfgtgr2 10 лет назад
Thats was pretty awesome!
@tony2063
@tony2063 8 лет назад
So it's "Icetrogen"... I'll leave now
@adellek6464
@adellek6464 8 лет назад
*points to the door menacingly*
@marisol64647
@marisol64647 8 лет назад
i eat dry ice and drink nitrogen for tea
@ItsJoshIAm
@ItsJoshIAm 9 лет назад
"It's cool." Eyyyyyyy I see what you did there
@chaitanya_anand
@chaitanya_anand 6 лет назад
Wow this is the first time I am understanding triple point. Thanks to you.
@michaelharmer5174
@michaelharmer5174 7 лет назад
This is super cool. I wish I got to see this in my science lessons at school. kids would be propelled to learn science.
@thedude-sp8po
@thedude-sp8po 8 лет назад
Cool... literally.
@arcxcc
@arcxcc 8 лет назад
at the end it was almost like a balloon deflating.
@UrAwsome55
@UrAwsome55 9 лет назад
this brings me back to chemistry class doing Equilibrium problems with pressure.
@sabastiankilgore9510
@sabastiankilgore9510 10 лет назад
I was watching an old spice ad before this and it was so amazing i forgot i was waiting to watch a video
@bruceliu1657
@bruceliu1657 8 лет назад
i think i want to see more experiments in french with english subtitles. for two birds with one stone. i think i was starting to understand what he was saying . glaceon seems to mean solid.
@BomberCraft21
@BomberCraft21 8 лет назад
Galçon in french just means like little ice formation (ice cube)
@bruceliu1657
@bruceliu1657 8 лет назад
ty 4 that.
@maximusboscus
@maximusboscus 8 лет назад
+Bruce Liu Glaçon
@louisparkes8666
@louisparkes8666 7 лет назад
Ce scientifique français aime beaucoup son métier! (Just testing my french after 2 years of learning :D)
@Djorgal
@Djorgal 7 лет назад
Almost perfect except that in french there is a space before the exclamation point.
@louisparkes8666
@louisparkes8666 7 лет назад
D'accord, merci !
@nicopasjaloux1128
@nicopasjaloux1128 5 лет назад
@@Djorgal nope
@nicopasjaloux1128
@nicopasjaloux1128 5 лет назад
@@Djorgal there is only one after the exclamation bar
@bwoah525
@bwoah525 3 года назад
haha the way he says 'plus bas! plus bas! plus bas! plus bas!', so full of excitement
@melaniec4560
@melaniec4560 8 лет назад
Love the enthusiasm of the older French gentleman! Great video- maybe some more subtitles so us non French speakers could understand more?
@erikcarter4008
@erikcarter4008 8 лет назад
maaan I wish school was like this
@wassim2724
@wassim2724 8 лет назад
I live in France and the schools are not all as good
@erikcarter4008
@erikcarter4008 8 лет назад
***** yeah, you know.. just generally engaging and hands on and what not
@varunpuridp
@varunpuridp 8 лет назад
1:00 we get it, you vape
@deisisase
@deisisase 10 лет назад
That was flipping Awesome! The sinking ice concept was hard to grasp though.
@martinspeedy5018
@martinspeedy5018 7 лет назад
yeah pretty cool CONCEPT!!
@elementalsheep2672
@elementalsheep2672 8 лет назад
Nitrate is NO3 and Nitrite is NO2 Now, if Carbonate is CO3 was Han Solo frozen in dry ice?
@erictaylor5462
@erictaylor5462 9 лет назад
The property of water ice to float is very unusually. Most other thing become more dense when frozen and sink. Water ice floats, which is very lucky. If water ice sank it would make life impossible.
@Fentanyl3
@Fentanyl3 9 лет назад
Pretty neat design huh?
@erictaylor5462
@erictaylor5462 9 лет назад
Josh Carmack What makes you think it's part of a design? Is it impossible to you that it just happened? In a googal yeas 10 to the 100 years you may not think it is so nice. By then most of the protons will have decayed into gamma rays. The universe will be mostly nothing.
@NiesamowiteWszystko
@NiesamowiteWszystko 9 лет назад
Eric Taylor It was designed by God to be like this.
@Spudcosmiccc
@Spudcosmiccc 9 лет назад
Niewidzialna ręka rynku Proof?
@NiesamowiteWszystko
@NiesamowiteWszystko 9 лет назад
***** It's called "faith" for a reason.
@StormwaterIsOneWord
@StormwaterIsOneWord 10 лет назад
Definitely adding this one to the Favorites.
@desilinx
@desilinx 10 лет назад
Who says science is boring? Some amazing, exciting stuff right there.
@danielrusin2393
@danielrusin2393 10 лет назад
i navigated here from somalian pilots getting shot at thanks youtube :D
@greg_d
@greg_d 10 лет назад
If I might make a suggestion that might save a few of your viewers' eyeballs or at the very least, a few frozen skin burns: Wear safety glasses. One little splashed drop of of liquid nitrogen can ruin an eyeball or cause a skin burn. Full face shield is preferable, but with liquid nitrogen, safety glasses are probably adequate.
@tyguy6296
@tyguy6296 10 лет назад
NEVER #YOLO #SMOKECO2ERRYDAY
@imac8175
@imac8175 10 лет назад
Liquid nitrogen splashed most likely will not cause skin burns due to the Leidenfrost Effect.If you are fast you can dunk your hand into a vat of liquid nitrogen with no ill effects. But I have to agree with safety glasses, eyes are to valuable to take any risk.
@MaureenMaynes
@MaureenMaynes 10 лет назад
imac8175 I think that's a foolish comment. It's not something that should be suggested. I omitted mentioning the need to wear safety glasses which you correctly advised as essential. When would you ever quickly dunk your hand into the container to place in or grab out a sample? How could you find it?
@billiammenzies3550
@billiammenzies3550 7 лет назад
That was so awesome! I can't help but wonder if/how one could scale that up to planet size and if the concept is solid enough for sci-fi. Imagine running into a planet sized mass that one has to chase around the solar system in Stellaris :D
@RoScFan
@RoScFan 9 лет назад
Huh, I didn't think about temperature. I thought he was going to increase the pressure, to force the nitrogen into a solid state. But he used a totally different method. Fascinating. Also this provides a good explanation if how refrigerators work.
@CPTcripp
@CPTcripp 9 лет назад
so the lil solid part that was in the water was acting much like a meteor or astroid ?
@kopopo23
@kopopo23 9 лет назад
in a sense, yeah. meteors and asteroids shrink as they heat up; the same goes for the dry ice in the water.
@kermanguy1877
@kermanguy1877 9 лет назад
*comet
@Heavysandvich24
@Heavysandvich24 9 лет назад
kopopo23 if a object is burning up in the atmosphere it's called a meteor if it hits the ground it's a meteorite
@kopopo23
@kopopo23 9 лет назад
Vaughan Bunt semantics isn't the point here but thanks for the trivia.
@bounding_star
@bounding_star 9 лет назад
CaliGaming also like a comet as it nears the sun
@RealationGames
@RealationGames 10 лет назад
"The fastest molecules escape, leaving the slower ones behind." Wait wait wait wait wait wait.... Isn't this decrease in temperature happening because vaporization requires energy to break the molecular bonds. This energy is got from the external heat, which cools it down. Are both true?
@Timothy.Hutama
@Timothy.Hutama 10 лет назад
its not molecular bonds, it's overcoming intermolecular interaction its not external heat, the energy is from internal energy which is why when the energy is used up in terms of energetic molecules escaping, the average movement of molecules decreases
@RealationGames
@RealationGames 10 лет назад
Timothy Hutama Yes, of course. Thanks for correcting that one. I was referring to that, but translated it wrong in my head.
@musicandoutdoors
@musicandoutdoors 10 лет назад
RealationGames you are correct, its the latent heat being lost from the liquid into the gas phase. However, only the (randomly) fastest moving molecules will have enough energy to leave the liquid phase, so the explanation was simplified in this manner I believe.
@DoremiKoeni
@DoremiKoeni 9 лет назад
Whoa.... That was freaking amazing!! :O I'm speechless...
@jackodonnell3463
@jackodonnell3463 2 года назад
That looked absolutely lifelike, all with no chemical reactions taking place! -- Just phase changes!
@TheShadoKnite
@TheShadoKnite 10 лет назад
Draw me like one of your French Girls.
@Seymour101
@Seymour101 10 лет назад
Je savais pas que tu parlais le français ! :D
@henriandco
@henriandco 10 лет назад
je veux rencontrer ce type, il envoie du foin par paquets de douze
@02500marc
@02500marc 8 лет назад
It's great to understand both tongues (i'm french ..) and see how happy they are!
@wayneyadams
@wayneyadams 2 года назад
Every time I did this for my Physics classes, the students expected the beaker to be hot, after all hot water boils.
@3ll1mc
@3ll1mc 8 лет назад
I want to meet that French guy, he seems really cool
@themarvellouschannel3032
@themarvellouschannel3032 4 года назад
Yeah, even his experiments are COOL
@themarvellouschannel3032
@themarvellouschannel3032 4 года назад
I really don't know why I am replying to a comment that was commented 4 years ago.
@swayingGrass
@swayingGrass 10 лет назад
Reducing pressure can boil it, but can also freeze it...@_@ brain blow
@plumbersteve
@plumbersteve 9 лет назад
^no. They are reducing the pressure. When you take the pressure off the liquid, the molecules are more free to move. This movement also frees them from their liquid bond, thus, boiling occurs. Boiling removes heat from the liquid.
@Gonzaga78
@Gonzaga78 9 лет назад
tomthepom98 that is wrong. They are reducing the pressure (they said it), lowering the ebulition point, making water boil at 30ºC. Same with the nitrogen but it would probably boil either way. the thing is (Indra Ida Bagus i think this answers your question too), when they reduce the pressure more nitrogen molecules will turn to gas. This will take eneygy (heat) away from the liquid, reducing it's temperature. So, if it boils and loses energy, its temperature will drop down to the point where it freezes. This is called the triple point, where the 3 phases (gas, liquid and solid) exist at the same temperature and pressure.
@don_juant
@don_juant 9 лет назад
tomthepom98 someone didnt watch the video at all
@Soulsphere001
@Soulsphere001 9 лет назад
It's really not that odd. Think about sweat, for instance, which evaporates and takes with it the heat that made you feel hot.
@Ndoda71
@Ndoda71 5 лет назад
The French man really loves his job, and his reactions are contagious
@fr3q_m33k
@fr3q_m33k 9 лет назад
That has got to be one of the maddest things I've ever seen... Epic..
@haarisjamil5080
@haarisjamil5080 8 лет назад
Why doesn't the nitrogen freeze the water in the water bath?
@luiza5235
@luiza5235 8 лет назад
specific heat :)
@armstrong.r
@armstrong.r 8 лет назад
+Luiz Apple Care to elaborate?
@luiza5235
@luiza5235 8 лет назад
+Robert Armstrong that was jusr a wild guess, but it's imo the only plausible explanation. water has a higher specific heat, meaning it takes lots more energy for it to change temperature than co2, but it IS rather strange that it didn't freeze, since the nitrogen was at -200
@haarisjamil5080
@haarisjamil5080 8 лет назад
I don't think specific heat has anything to do with it. Carbon dioxide has a specific latent heat of fusion of 184 kJ/kg, while for water is 334 kj/kg. The difference isn't that large to make such a dramatic difference, I'd reckon.
@JustusLynetta
@JustusLynetta 8 лет назад
+Haaris Jamil In my opinion it'd have to do with the low transfer rate and just the volume of nitrogen compared to water, which is exceedingly less. The amount of gas created might seem a lot but the actual volume of liquid/solid nitrogen is very low.
@ThePistonHead
@ThePistonHead 9 лет назад
Why did the water not freeze?
@patrickfrench4829
@patrickfrench4829 9 лет назад
Because the nitrogen evaporates to quickly. Think of the way water droplets float over a red hot pan. In this casee water is so hot that the Nitrogen cant even touch it. Same for the CO2, it's not floating it's hovering.
@Fentanyl3
@Fentanyl3 9 лет назад
Well, it's actually the liedenfrost effect causing it to transfer very little heat from the water into the N2
@Fentanyl3
@Fentanyl3 9 лет назад
Josh Carmack The same effect that Patrick French is speaking of when water is spilled on a very hot surface.
@BabyBlueFord
@BabyBlueFord 9 лет назад
Josh Carmack It is a combination of both, really.
@murderspoon
@murderspoon 9 лет назад
BabyBlueFord Josh Carmack its also the same thing that let the mythbusters dip their hand in molten lead without getting burned to buggery (but i wouldnt recommend anyone try to replicate this themselves)
@ceojr1963
@ceojr1963 7 лет назад
Thanks for the Science experiments.
@MINXC3
@MINXC3 10 лет назад
That solid piece of CO2 is how I imagine comets react as they get closer to the Sun.
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