yes,it is not. there are constant air pockets within the sand when there is air flow below it (like how quicksand works) and a lot of creatures could live inside sand without air pockets existing. although sharks may be a stretch. the possible creatures that might exist in sand seas are the ones like the jhen mohran from monster hunter,but creatures still need to adapt. but with the rate of new species appearing today,I'd say "sand sharks" would appear around 10 - 30 years from now if there are locations found with constant airflow beneath the sand don't let these guys tear down what could be possible
Welcome back to another episode of why is this in my recommended? EDIT: God damn 1.6k likes? I'm guessing a lot of people got this in their recommended.
The giant sandworms in Dune and how they moved through sand always stretched my suspension of disbelief. Then the new Dune movie came out and showed that THIS is how they do it. It all makes sense now.
you mean that they create the vibrations all around them to help them to move? that vibrating sand seemed like from their roaring, but maybe they might carry this vibration around them to help them move through more easily
@@mrspidey80 interesting.. I havent really thought about it like that and just took it that their sheer force helped to move through it.. but I like this vibrations helping them. maybe that for and growling is enough to make it vibrate and water-like :D
Miro Yes, but there is another way to activate it. Just flow air from a pipe mounted on the bottom of the box. According to the development team, "It's not a bug, it's a feature", so apparently they are not going to patch it completely.
Fascinating. This is actually how the Giant Sand Worms in Dune move freely through the sand. They created a massive vibration in the sand around them that changed the behavior of the sand to make it like water that they actually swim through. In the movie you can see how the sand starts to vibrate around them and the Freman sink into the sand like quicksand. The closer someone is to the worm the more they sink.
A Jones i tried it but the sand glitched through my speaker, then a few moment the sand launched and managed to glitched out of the map.. few moment laters it says on the chat "sand fell out of the world".. i think mine have a virus
"This is known as a fluidized bed. Whenever you have a sizable container of fine particles and pump up air though it from the bottom, the movement of the particles gives the material the physical properties of a liquid." Reddit: u/ohmato
They have rows of pipes with a lot of really small holes in them, with compressed air coming out of them. It causes the particles to become excited and start moving faster, causing the surface to become nearly frictionless.
wtf sand is SiO2 which has a boiling point simlar to diamond … high as fuck,you think your hand can survive that?as well as the amount of heat loss in open container
This metaphor runs deep. It kind of gives you an idea of what could happen to all the houses built upon the sand when the big earthquakes hit. Liquefaction is a very interesting [and dangerous] phenomenon!
But how do they blow air through it? They didn't show the system in the video. so I don't know what materials and machine to use. Do they have a fan in the bottom of the bucket?
After liquification cohesionless particles losses grain to grain contact and so their strength & start behaving like fluid Liquification is done by pumping air from bottom of container This same can be seen if we pump water instead of air
Paul Roosen no it may seem weird but if you blow air from the bottom through fine particles in a large chamber like the one in the video it makes the particles act like a liquid
Paul Roosen no trust me its air flowing through it the sand is really really fine so thats why it isnt getting blown away also there isnt alot of power pushing it its just a small airflow
clash with abraham you put an emoji, and a dead trend in one comment, how do you intend to have no hate comments? I mean yeah sure 19 normies did like you but how about the rest?
its not real sand or if it is then there is a very dense liquid beneath with a very low boiling point and there is a large layer of sand film on top giving the impression of boiling sand
this happens because, when you vibrate something or things really fast the particles move fast as well which also means there is going to m be more space between those particles, almost exactly like water.
I'm not too sure what to call it. EDM if anything. I don't think anyone is 'offended' friend. It's just that you wouldn't call an apple an orange and expect not to be corrected. I've linked a video to a house track. Please compare the two. If you still feel these two tracks are similar in any way beyond the fact that they were both electronic productions, then I don't know what to tell you. Note the warmth and depth of the track I linked. The layers, musicality and instumentation. The place it takes you when you listen to it. There is a world of difference. House is a culture, a feeling. If you go around calling just anything house music then someone that is a part of that culture will probably at some point want to help refine your perception because it matters to them how that culture and sound is represented. I'm not saying the track in this video is 'garbage' or 'ear cancer' or anything like that. It just certainly isn't house music. Cheers! ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-ntpPdx3zxy0.html
Unlike the other asshats around here I actually like this music, and while I was not expecting to find this today and have a new artist to follow, I am happy that I do now :) Thanks for making great music!
Denkou Masato there's this thing called "preference". I fucking hate trap music but I don't call people asshats if they like it, and I don't call people asshats if they dislike music I love. You sir, are an asshat
The potential... someone walks on sand then you turn it into liquid. They fall in, then you turn it back to normal. The body is already hidden and you barely had to move a muscle
it is actually liquefaction Soil liquefaction describes a phenomenon whereby a saturated or partially saturated soil substantially loses strength and stiffness in response to an applied stress, usually earthquake shaking or other sudden change in stress condition, causing it to behave like a liquid.