> temp > à-trier > making-a-black-flame-sodium-containing-flame-lit-up-by-a-sodium-steet-lamp-steve-mould

Light sucking flames look like magic

Steve Mould - 2024-05-27

Try Odoo for yourself: https://www.odoo.com/r/kYo

I love the black flame experiment works because of the sodium absorption and emission spectrums. Glassblower glasses make use of the absorption of Neodymium and Praseodymium to block the sodium glow when working glass.

EnChroma glasses work the way they claim to work. But whether they’re worth buying is another question.

My nephew’s channel about Gorilla Tag is here: https://www.youtube.com/@suspiciousoranges

Chris Wesley’s i-Phos Spectrometer can be found here: https://chriswesley.org/spectrometer.htm

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CHAPTERS

00:00 Intro
00:15 Black flame explanation
06:17 Glassblower glasses
09:04 spectroscopy
10:58 Fine structure of Sodium lines (electron spin)
12:30 Spectroscopy of glassblower glasses
14:06 Spectroscopy of EnChroma glasses
17:10 Bunsen burner fact

CORRECTIONS

01:52 Actually about 0.34 attojoules!
11:12 zero-dimensional

@SteveMould - 2024-05-27

There's so much more I could say about EnChroma but it's already 19 minutes long!
The sponsor is Odoo. Try it for yourself today: https://www.odoo.com/r/kYo

@Lksz-l9k - 2024-05-27

Isn't that a scam, though? (EnChroma)

source: MegaLag has quite a few videos on it...

@pink7522 - 2024-05-27

For people interested in how EnChroma glasses DON'T work, a Youtuber called 'MegaLag' made a few Videos about them.

@TommyHanusa - 2024-05-27

How does EnChroma glasses being polarized have anything to do with their possible affect on some symptoms of color blindness? is all colored light polarized?

@pplscomp2 - 2024-05-27

@MegaLag has done a fair amount on enchroma.
Maybe consult/collaboration would be beneficial

@Muonium1 - 2024-05-27

FYI the other peak in the infrared at 10:00 is another Na doublet at 818.3 nm (3d2D3/2 → 3p2Po1/2) and 819.5 nm (3d2D5/2 → 3p2Po3/2). See "Surrogate measurement of chlorine concentration on steel surfaces by alkali element detection via laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy" in Spectrochimica Acta B by Xiao et al.

@majorgnu - 2024-05-27

7:40 Hey! There's a legit use case for that!
People who live near sodium public lighting might want their windows tinted like that, so their room is dark during the night but then in the morning (most) sunlight will filter through and help them gradually wake up!

@skeetsmcgrew3282 - 2024-05-28

Exceptionally niche product that could be solved with cheap automatic blinds hooked up to a photoreceptor. And it wouldn't encourage you to be naked in front of your open window by accident

@Transit_Biker - 2024-05-28

But how expensive would that glass be?

@MrHowzaa - 2024-05-28

they dont use sodium lamps any more

@bosstowndynamics5488 - 2024-05-28

​@@skeetsmcgrew3282That use case is pretty niche but the same concept is a big part of why areas around some major observatories still insist on using low pressure sodium lamps for street lighting, because they can use a very narrow band filter to cut out all of the light pollution.

@tressel2489 - 2024-05-28

@@skeetsmcgrew3282 even if it's a costlier solution, it's much more elegant than the automatic blinds.

@IslandHermit - 2024-05-27

I don't know whether it's the quality of your pedagogy or if we just happen to think alike but whenever I have questions while watching one of your videos you inevitably say, "You might be wondering..." and then answer those questions. It makes your content extremely satisfying to watch. The downside is that since I'm left with no outstanding questions I rarely comment, hurting that elusive "engagement" metric. So here's me making up for that.

@hgabreu - 2024-05-27

Goddamn that's a good comment. One of very few around YouTube. I had to join the metric here 😂

@SloverOfTeuth - 2024-05-27

I was wondering if someone was going to make that comment.

@camicus-3249 - 2024-05-27

and this comment has done the exact same thing lol

@antewaso8876 - 2024-05-27

spot on!

@ishanpm_ - 2024-05-27

Great content makes the viewer think and ask questions, and even better content anticipates those questions and answers them.

@donaldshockley4116 - 2024-05-27

When I was learning electronics in the Navy, we used to joke that DS label used for lights in a circuit diagram stood for Dark Sucker. When a bulb blows, all the dark leaks out.

@danielreed5199 - 2024-05-27

Douglas Adams and Terry Pratchett would be proud of you.

@YunxiaoChu - 2024-05-27

Lol

@CarpeNoctem135 - 2024-05-27

I frequently call power plants with the big steam stacks “cloud machines” and a handful of people take me seriously.

I almost always roll with it when they do

@panzerswineflu - 2024-05-27

As a mm electronics had magic smoke and if it was released it was the em problem

@Yotanido - 2024-05-27

Are there refills for the dark, like there are refills for the magic smoke?

@kendomyers - 2024-06-28

The light of the sodium street lamp made me feel nostalgic

I associate the freedom of youth with that color, being old enough to walk around with friends at night without my parents, but young enough to have the time and energy to go out and have fun like that

@lmf8503 - 2024-08-17

Was going to make a similar comment. Sodium street lighting is liquid nostalgia for me. So warm and comforting, especially in winter.

I understand the advantage of near white LED street lights, but it is so cold and harsh. Very unpleasant.

@EthanRadell - 2024-09-12

@@lmf8503 finally. Somebody sane on this fucking rock

@duckpwnd - 2024-10-30

I love sodium street lights. They bring back so many memories of walking around the city and enjoying random bars and restaurants during the good old days.

@mif4731 - 2024-11-10

They are still common in my city

@h.n.4060 - 2024-05-29

Sodium street lamps were actually way better at controlling light pollution. Because they emit light at such a narrow spectrum, it was possible to make something called a CLS (City Light Suppression) filter that removes the sodium band, but even wearing those glass blower glasses would mean you could actually see the stars, and through a telescope nebula, and galaxies quite well, almost as though you were in a dark sky site with no city lights.

The LED bulbs everyone is switching to are horrible because they emit white or blue light broadly, making it almost impossible to filter. Further, these colors also increase the light dome (basically how far light travels away from it's source) over urban areas, meaning that areas around cities that were once dark no longer are. This has forced backyard astrophotographers to switch to narrowband imaging, which is really only useful for nebula, and that's incredibly expensive to get into.

To make up for this, some companies sell sodium-like LED street lamps for locations where having dark skies are important, but they are very expensive (basically they are taking advantage of the situation). Personally, I wish we'd just switch back to the sodium lamps, they are as efficient as LED's and they're just better for the night time environment.

@BrendanBurwood - 2024-05-30

Sodium street lights are also FAR better at making colour "blind" people like myself completely miss a red traffic light, because it gets lost in the sea of sodium lights. Sodium street lights are dangerous, & CAUSE conditions that lead to traffic accidents. This is NOT speculation - it is from personal experience! I am very happy they are mostly gone now (despite also being interested in Astronomy) - we are ALL SAFER for it!

@DawnDavidson - 2024-06-02

@@BrendanBurwoodthat’s an important consideration! I grew up with the sodium lamps, and I never minded them. But they definitely did shift the perception of colors for those of us with “normal” color
Vision. I can imagine how terrifying it would be to have nearly every stop light washed out by them! Seems to me we would all do a lot better if we switched to lights that had a SHAPE as well as a color patter to them. Like an arrow up that is also green, vs an X that is also red, and maybe a dash — that is also yellow. This would give people multiple clues to decipher what they mean. In the past, when they were really light bulbs and lenses, it would have been hard to do. But these days, you can arrange LEDs in any pattern you like pretty easily. And I’ve seen plenty of green arrow lights for left turns, so I know it’s pretty easily done. Do you know if anyone has suggested something like this yet? I can’t imagine someone hasn’t already thought of it!

@BrendanBurwood - 2024-06-02

@@DawnDavidson There were arrow lights before LED's were a thing - just a simple screen on the front of the light with the right shape on it. I suspect it's easier to just replace sodium lights with something else as they wear out, rather than attempting to retrain everyone on a new set of signals.

Interesting extra aside is that for my type of colour vision some of the lights (MUCH brighter for my vision) that replaced the sodium ones (my mother says they are "apricot" in colour, but I try to not use subjective colour names) get confused with the green traffic lights. This isn't really a problem though, since it doesn't matter if you don't see a green traffic light pointing at you. The red light plus sodium lighting was & is the main dangerous situation - miss a red light can equal a VERY bad day! (also witnessed that happen a few cars in front of me in daylight - 4 car pinball!😮) I have been very happy to see them get mostly phased out in the last 2 decades or so.

@ZentaBon - 2024-06-03

Dude the clouds GLOW from reflecting street lights. We went out of town a few years ago near Lake Superior and we could see Duluth because the clouds over top it always glowed WHITE. When I grew up the clouds glowed orange at night, now it is white with the new lights.

@VultureXV - 2024-06-03

We really cant understate light pollution...

@milleniunrealjaron - 2024-05-29

Someone else may have already commented about this, but the fact that the light emitted by sodium atoms produces roughly one wavelength of visible light was used in movies for compositing in lieu of greenscreen. This technique known as "Sodium Vapor Process" or informally "Yellow screen" utilized custom-made beam-splitter prisms with embedded notch filters (similar to how EnMouldia glasses work) and Bandpass filters split the image into two parts to create a perfect matte. This process was famously used by Disney in the filming of Bed knobs and Broomsticks as well as Mary Poppins.

@angrypotato_fz - 2024-05-30

And Corridor Digital recently managed to collaborate with an engineer reconstructing such camera setup and made a very interesting test movie with amazing key mattes thanks to sodium vapor!

@SomeplaceScary - 2024-06-01

Wasn't it also used in The Birds?

@thekingoffailure9967 - 2024-06-01

The f is a bed knob

@matthewstarkie4254 - 2024-06-01

@@thekingoffailure9967 An ornamental ball on the top of the posts of an old fashioned bed. Loads of wooden furniture used to have knobs, we were just a knob obsessed society 😄

@J.A.huscher - 2024-06-02

​@@matthewstarkie4254 I have those on my metal bed frame but I didn't know that was what bed knobs were lol

@Tynach - 2024-05-28

I'm really glad you specifically mentioned that color blindness is due to the L and M cones overlapping more than usual! Lots of people seem to think that color blindness is caused by a lack of one or the other, when really it's a mutation.

That said, the reason why the literature is inconclusive is largely because there are multiple types and degrees of color blindness. "Red-Green" color blindness is actually a catch-all for the two most common categories: Protan (mutated L ('red') cones), and Deutan (mutated M ('green') cones).

Each of those two categories additionally has 'full color blindness' variants: Protanopia (when L cones are mutated to the extent that they behave exactly like M cones), and Deuteranopia (when M cones are mutated to the extent that they behave exactly like L cones). Whenever the mutation doesn't cause them to act completely like the other type, it's called _anomalous trichromacy_, and there are various degrees to that. The terms used are: Protanomaly (when L cones have shifted to behave somewhat like M cones), and Deuteranomaly (when M cones have shifted to behave somewhat like L cones).

So, because of all those different types, the way that light filtered by the Enchroma glasses is perceived will differ depending on which type of color blindness a person actually has. Notably, they can only work for people with anomalous trichromacy, and it will work better with one type of anomalous trichromacy than the other (though I don't know which one it works better for).

People with dichromacy (full color blindness) would have no use for them, and not be able to see any difference.

And finally, people with tritanopia and tritanomaly are left without any options because it's already super rare anyway. The only time I've ever even seen a joke or mention of it in something that's well-known, is a subtle jab at tritanopia in the movie 'A Christmas Story', when the father can't tell the difference between the green and blue lights. I've been studying color blindness for several years now, and it was only this past Christmas while watching that movie yet again that I caught that and it made me burst out laughing in front of my suddenly very confused family.

@AileTheAlien - 2024-05-29

Would those glasses work a bit easier, if the left and right lenses blocked different colors? I'd imagine it would be a bit like those old blue-red 3D glasses, but maybe it'd be too annoying and distracting to be practical. 🤔

@deadlyshizzno - 2024-05-29

Thank you for sharing this! Didn't think I would be learning this much about color blindness tonight but that was fascinating to read

@dantemeriere5890 - 2024-05-29

It's well-known amongst colorblind people that the Enchroma glasses are a huge scam, perpetuated by youtubers who keep lying about the effects. They don't let you see anything you can't, they just make colors "different". They just mess up the colors, and colorblind people can notice when colors are all messed up. The reason they "work" with anomalous trichromacy is that the weakest your colorblindness, the more you perceive how much it's messing up everything. In the end colors end up even less accurate than we see them normally, and yet they falsely claim it makes us see colors we can't see. It's just that, a scam with little to no scientific merit.

EDIT: If you want to know more about the massive scam that is Enchroma, there's a very good video on the subject here on Youtube called "Exposing the Color Blind Glasses Scam". It goes in depth at explaining how it's all BS.

@retyroni - 2024-05-29

​@@dantemeriere5890 Enchroma has a 60 day money back return policy. I don't think "scam" means what you think it means.

@dantemeriere5890 - 2024-05-29

​@@retyroni Enchroma glasses are almost always given as gifts and promoted as such. Naturally, most people are not going to complain about a gift to such an extent. Their promotional material targets people with normal vision almost exclusively, probably because they know very well that colorblind people are very well informed about their condition and wouldn't easily fall for this. This means they are deliberately taking advantage of people's ignorance and good faith. This is the very definition of scamming someone, and if you still "think" otherwise, it's a good idea to check a dictionary.

Furthermore, this isn't any controversial statement. This is very well-known in the colorblind community, as shown by the video I mentioned in my previous comment.

@deividsuarez4325 - 2024-09-30

Amaterasu 😮

@hartyewh1 - 2024-11-04

Can't believe it took me two pages of scrolling to find this. Thank you.

@rehansheikh7638 - 2024-11-05

Itachi

@JD7Y - 2024-11-07

Lol😂

@Ignisan_66 - 2024-11-10

Who is that?

@KumiKaze33 - 2024-05-28

A fun fact about the sodium light spectrum is Disney created a special process back in the day that worked better than any blue/green screen using a prism. They could get much more detail around a subject without any spill from the screens as well as being able to film sheer & transparent materials. Marry Poppins is the best example of this. The Corridor channel did an interesting deep dive and recreated the effect on one of their channels.

@laurennewman9365 - 2024-05-29

Was just commenting to say the same thing :D https://youtu.be/UQuIVsNzqDk?si=xi6Eh5vvBBpQyNie

@DRSDavidSoft - 2024-05-29

I was also thinking of the same video!

@kikijewell2967 - 2024-05-29

Was this IR screen? I haven't seen the video, but I read about it in the excellent book, Special Effects Cinematography.

They used it on Wizard of Oz.

The way it worked was by using a dichroic filter to split a light source. They used the light to illuminate a black screen that was painted with infrared paint. Then they illuminated the characters with light with IR filtered out.

Then they split the image coming into the camera using the same type of dichroic filter - the visible light passing through to the film negative, and the reflection landing on an IR sensitive film.

By this method, they created the positive and the mask of the characters all in one pass, and one film processing step.

This produced far better results than green screen.

@TrophyGuide101 - 2024-05-29

As soon as I saw that light it reminded me of the Disney Prism video and I thought 'Somebody else had to mention this in the comments' and sure enough here you are!

@iccherrypiez - 2024-05-30

was looking for this comment! good stuff!

@archimedes6563 - 2024-05-27

Now someone can make the REAL Darksaber!

@ENZO_D - 2024-05-27

Ah yes, You right!

@G33v3s - 2024-05-27

I came here to say this!!

@manabellum - 2024-05-27

But you have to live on the planet with a sodium sun.

@ENZO_D - 2024-05-27

@@manabellum Ok, so first step, we can find sodium in salt, so now we juste have to build a sun with!

@eqwerewrqwerqre - 2024-05-27

Only with a very dim sodium doped methanol (or other similarly colorless flame) saber, while battling under an EXTREMELY brightly streetlit night scene

@glenmorrison8080 - 2024-05-27

16:12 From one uncle to another, this is top notch uncling giving your nephew's YouTube a shoutout. Bravo.

@Alskaskan - 2024-05-28

I noticed that too, one more reason to wanna marry the guy

@notfeedynotlazy - 2024-05-29

@@The3Sag3 He usually puts his sponsors at the end. Clearly the little guy is the actual sponsor of this video!

@Alskaskan - 2024-05-29

@@The3Sag3 I wouldn't read too much into it. Most viewers are probably going to watch until the end anyway so he might as well put it at a point in the video that is more natural rather than making it prominent and awkward.
At the end of the day it was a nice little callout that brought a little joy to a couple of us to see.

@semihmasat - 2024-06-02

@@Alskaskan yea, it would have been weird if he just mentioned it in the middle of the video.
he also did it like, "i am mentioned about this because i showed his reaction to the glass i am talking about" kinda nice and casual way.

"im not promoting, im proud about him" kinda way.

@machineboy3538 - 2024-08-06

The one simple trick the Gloam-Eyed Queen DOESN'T want you to know about!

@nunoosorio3832 - 2024-09-17

10/10

@veracc - 2024-10-13

I was expecting a lot of er references but found this only, good one

@chiiing8288 - 2024-11-01

I can feel the %hp damage

@bloblovlalalulu3422 - 2024-11-08

Thank goodness I found this

@MasterHigure - 2024-05-27

2:30 I like how your camera can't even remotely pick up on the actual rainbow in that diffraction grating, and just gives you three bands of RGB.

@LostieTrekieTechie - 2024-05-27

I find it fascinating and deeply troubling. If there is not a probabilistic fall off between colors of pure wavelengths, what does that say about their ability to capture color in a way that matches our eyes.

@fuseteam - 2024-05-27

Nothing actually as you can produce any color of light with those 3 :D

@nahblue - 2024-05-27

I don't like

@mynameisben123 - 2024-05-27

There must be something else going on because I can definitely capture say, yellow, with my digital camera

@TijmenZwaan - 2024-05-27

@@mynameisben123 No, you cannot. Your digital camera just captures a combination of red, green and blue that looks yellow to our human eyes.

@Incandescentiron - 2024-05-27

PRACTICAL APPLICATION:
I design optics for street lights. With respect to high pressure sodium lamps, we had to make sure our optics did not reflect light back into the arc tube because the sodium would absorb its own light and cause the arc tube to overheat. This would shorten the life of the lamp.

@ChibiHoshiDragon - 2024-05-27

Practical application was Mary Poppins
Better than Green Screen

@llamallama2000 - 2024-05-28

@@ChibiHoshiDragon Have you seen the Corridor Digital video?

@ChibiHoshiDragon - 2024-05-28

@@llamallama2000 yup

@ABaumstumpf - 2024-05-27

The CRI of low-pressure sodium lamps is not just low, not just 0, it is actually Negative.
It is so wonderfully efficient at both illuminating as well as destroying any colour recognition.

@gordonrichardson2972 - 2024-05-27

Interesting, I did not know CRI could be negative. P.S. Plenty of sodium vapour lamps in my street.

@ABaumstumpf - 2024-05-27

@@gordonrichardson2972 Yeah, a nice quirk of how that number is calculated.
Granted - CRI was never designed for light that does not at least Appear to be white-ish, but still strange.

@johnydl - 2024-05-27

As I understand it 0 is as bad as it can get while technically being white. For example, a trichromatic light-source with narrow (or single wavelength) red, green and blue peaks would approximate white but it would also make things look as weird as low-pressure sodium lighting.

Because sodium street lights are effectively monochromatic yellow this makes them even worse than that. I believe that's why it has a CRI of -44

@ABaumstumpf - 2024-05-27

@@johnydl I was looking for some more information on low-CRI sources buuut seems like nobody wants to create such a useless product.
A lightsource having near monochromatic peaks that manage to hit the cones just right to appear white to us. Theoretically just 2 emission-lines should be enough, but i'd guess we can do with 3 :P

@thomasr730 - 2024-05-27

Brainiac75 did a video about this 2 days ago (watch?v=l9Gv5FVE-0c), he said the CRI was -44

@noahwattel4226 - 2024-10-01

0:12 I mean we did that in chemistry class as a matter of fact, everyone should have since your chemistry teacher should warn you not to do that, as an invisible flame is very dangerous because, well you know you don't see it.

@dannyhothrikker4783 - 2024-10-04

Chemistry like drivers Ed is not only optional but not the main core of education in America. I only took chemistry because I wanted to. Most people didn’t. Most of the kids who were interested watched a lil too much Breaking Bad and that was the only thing that got them interested.

@noahwattel4226 - 2024-10-05

@@dannyhothrikker4783 Crazy here it's 100% mandatory for all 3 main levels of high school education. You'll have it for at least 4-6 years.

@noahwattel4226 - 2024-10-06

@@dannyhothrikker4783 that's crazy, it's defenitly mandatory in high school over here you have to follow it for like at least 3 years I think with a maximum of 4~6 years depending on the level of education.

@elliot_rat - 2024-10-10

homeschooled kids:

@noahwattel4226 - 2024-10-10

@@elliot_rat actually homeschooling is illegal here.

@neilfmoore - 2024-05-29

About a decade ago, my wife and I were visiting Killarney, Ireland. While we were walking back from the town center to our B&B after sunset one night, we noticed that her bright red raincoat appeared a very dark gray under the streetlights. Turns out, this was the first time we had encountered sodium streetlights in person.

@dewitttylerharrison6678 - 2024-05-29

i have struggled with "Spin" of subatomic particles for years. The "it tells us which way the moving electric charge points its magnetic field" line felt like an epiphany i have waited decades for

@redtoxic8701 - 2024-06-01

Nice, and the reason the property is called "spin" is simply because the magnetic field of the electrons looks as if it was produced by the electrons spinning. Even though they're not, since they're wave functions at quantum level

@alexeifando747 - 2024-06-03

I recommend PBS Spacetime for in depth content on electron spin and physics in general.

@ArawnOfAnnwn - 2024-06-03

@@alexeifando747 I've seen their spin episode. While sure it does explain what spin does, even they couldn't make it intuitive. Ultimately the idea of something having angular momentum but also being a point particle that can't actually spin just breaks our imagination. There's a reason even physicists (or even more so physics students) joke about spin.

@pandapanda1631 - 2024-06-08

Congratulations, I still don't understand anything. 😅😅😅

@RWZiggy - 2024-06-08

it's kind of a mislabeling, since the fundamental particles don't have any size, they are points, any "wavelength" is just about probabilities So, they can't "spin" since they don't have any part that could face in different directions.

@bbittercoffee - 2024-09-01

0:40 yes BUT you gotta admit it looks pretty cool

@lawlietackerman450 - 2024-09-09

Yoooo jajaja

@rhkips - 2024-05-29

I have the immense joy of being incredibly colorblind. The enChroma glasses did not work for me. However, for $30, I found a particular shade of polarized dark brown cataract sunglasses at CVS (a large chain pharmacy/chemist in the US, for those unfamiliar), which allow me to interpret reds far more easily than I otherwise can. It makes being outside very pleasant, and it's honestly really cool to be able to see the things people have been pointing out all my life that I never understood the interest over.

It's a very noticeably subtractive experience, but I find my brain can easily ignore that aspect of it, especially after a few minutes of adaptation, and I get to experience the world slightly darker, and can notice red and red-adjacent things.

@Macachee - 2024-06-02

What’s the name of these glasses?

@johannageisel5390 - 2024-06-03

Can you now also see all the red herrings?

@junicornplays980 - 2024-06-03

I'm not colorblind, but there's a pair of brown polarized glasses I get from Walgreens that makes greens really pop, especially in the sun. I find the shade of green really beautiful, so I just keep buying the same pair when they get worn out.

@olmostgudinaf8100 - 2024-06-01

Wow, came here for a black flame (which I knew would be about sodium absorption lines) and learned about glass blowing, colour blindness and - finally - a good explanation of an electron spin.

@LukePuplett - 2024-08-12

Was gonna say the same. So much packed in here. Like 5 years of secondary school. Come to think of it, how old am I? What year am I in?! 😅

@KajHall - 2024-10-15

Steve is slowly turning into Michael from Vsauce XD

@Sayne7 - 2024-05-27

Sodium light again huh..? first the disney 'greenscreening' prism, now black flames! Sodium light is very useful for color spectrum science it seems.

@lux_fero - 2024-05-27

It souldn't seem, it IS because of it's property of pure single color emmision

@ralphwiggum1203 - 2024-05-27

a fellow corridor crew fan

@charlesdorval394 - 2024-05-27

​@@lux_fero Indeed, it was used over here because of the nearby observatory, as it's easy to filter since guide stars (ie. "their laser pointer") use the same wavelength (or very similar)

@Eragon954 - 2024-05-27

Corridor Digital, Brainiac75 and now Steve Mould. Us 589nm fans are on a roll this year

@hammerth1421 - 2024-05-27

The sodium D line is a simple way of creating bright monochromatic light. These days, lasers are a thing, but it still has its uses.

@JustinHold - 2024-06-20

Elden Ring Black Flame builds finally getting the love they deserve.

@baronvonbeandip - 2024-09-17

Elden Ring? You mean Dark Souls?

@TheEnergizingbunny - 2024-06-04

I see this flame and the first thing that comes to mind is the Godskin Cult.

@jaefellow9010 - 2024-06-11

the god-slaying flame...

@eyeballpapercut4400 - 2024-06-11

AND NOT GIANTDAD‽

@OtepRalloma - 2024-06-15

​@@eyeballpapercut4400 The future is now, old man. (i say this as a dark souls veteran...)

@hengedraws - 2024-06-20

came here to say this

@motojauntx - 2024-06-24

I’m glad i didn’t have to scroll far to find the Elden Ring players on the video about black flames.

@AuraMaster_7 - 2024-05-28

As someone with mild red-green colorblindness and a pair of Enchromas, I feel like I should say that they do work, but not to allow me to "see colors I couldn't see before"

Mostly what they do is allow me to distinguish shades of green and red that my eyes have trouble picking apart from the background by cutting out the duller shades of those colors and making them more vibrant.

Like, say, a green bush full of red flowers. Without Enchromas I might be able to tell that there are red flowers, but unless I got up close to the bush and searched for them, I wouldn't be able to just distinguish the red flowers at a glance.

My Enchromas allow me to do just that. And the same goes for different shades of green.

I could physically see those colors already, my eyes just sucked at picking them out from each other when they're all mixed up. Kinda like the colorblindness tests with the different colored dots.

They do make blues a bit purpley, though.

@0Rookie0 - 2024-05-28

Thank you for this comment! I think I have nearly the same amount of red-green deficiency and I wondered if they would do anything at all. Distinguishing a red berry in a bush is trivial if I'm looking at it, but from a small distance away or at a quick glace it's nearly impossible. I'll have to try and find a pair just to try it out.

@Peter_R996 - 2024-05-28

I have pretty bad red green colour blindness and the Enchroma glasses did absolutely nothing for me!

@PeterLeonard1 - 2024-05-28

I have some Enchromas and mild colour blindness. Whilst wearing them, everything looks a bit weird and fake, BUT I am able to distinguish between colours that I otherwise wouldn't be able to. My main for use for this at work when reading things that have legends with colour categories - I can actually distinguish between things when using the Enchromas.

@bagdiil - 2024-05-28

Please stop perpetuating the lie that is enchroma glasses. It's been proven that they are a complete and utter hoax... Look up MegaLag's video about them.

@themoss7115 - 2024-05-28

So it would be more correct to say the glasses are not about fixing the color blindness, but about fixing the uneven color distribution it brings? Because I can see how it would help the dynamic range of your vision.

@BattleFlyNate - 2024-05-27

You might not like being shouted at, but how about some praise? I highly appreciate you doing resarch into the glasses before shouting them out in any way, even more so that you actually share the controversy, instead of just saying it's bs or 100% fact. That's exactly what I want out of a science channel!

@SloverOfTeuth - 2024-05-27

One guy did a series of videos on these glasses, claiming that because they are purely subtractive, they cannot enhance colour perception. I don't think that's actually true, but it takes rather a lot of reasoning/explanation. Ultimately I think it comes down to the fact that colours are determined by the ratios of the components, and a subtractive filter can indeed change the observed ratios in real world scenes, leaving open the possibility of perceiving a wider range of colours.

I don't know whether or not they help people, I think that would need to be determined empirically using real-world scenes and some kind of blind glasses, but it was what I considered an overly-simplistic statement I objected to, so I'm glad Steve takes a more measured approach.

@GambitsEnd - 2024-05-27

The difficulty is having to account for how the brain processes that information, which is something I rarely ever see discussed. @@SloverOfTeuth

@openfire2691 - 2024-05-27

No, if the glasses are strictly subtractive (which they are), then it would be impossible for a person using them to see new colors. The explanation is quite simple and logical, too: when you’re subtracting colors on the visible spectrum and are left with a new, altered spectrum, it’s the same as looking at something without that filter that already omits that particular spectrum. In other words, since every post-filter spectrum can also be created without the filter, then obviously adding the filter cannot create a “new” spectrum.

Put in mathematical terms, if we say that A is a set containing all possible spectrums that can be found naturally, and B is a set containing all possible resulting spectrums after applying the filter, B is a subset of A, which means that by definition it’s impossible for B to contain a value outside of A.

That’s not to say that Enchroma glasses don’t do anything. In fact, I think it’s pretty obvious (and not really at all disputed) that they help colorblind individuals distinguish reds and greens better, specifically by blocking out the confusing color, so something might look more green or more red. But the idea that they allow you to see “new colors” is ridiculous and as of yet has no logical or scientific evidence to support it.

@SloverOfTeuth - 2024-05-27

@@openfire2691 There's a fault in your logic, which is easy to demonstrate by counterexample. If A is the set of all greys in a colour space, subtractive filtering can produce non-greys in B. Non-greys are not a subset of greys.

This is why I specifically limited my comments to real world scenes. If they occupy a limited part of the colour space, we can always generate additional colours by subtractive filtering.

@jh-ec7si - 2024-05-27

HI STEVE I ENJOYED YOUR VIDEO

@Will_Forge - 2024-11-06

"How can a point-like particle have angular momentum?" (at 11:35) I think is because it's a vector rather than a point. It has a a location and also a direction and rate conveyed into reality as a location over time with the rate being set to "infinity" which is not possible so it hits the universal speed limit instead. You can essentially think of it as a fundamental aspect of spacetime, not just space, and you can think of it as a particle that moves on the smallest possible scale every universal "frame" (in video game terms), meaning it is so fast it updates its location faster than everything else but no faster than the computer (the universe) can process its movement.

The reason it applies to very well to computer programmed hit scan lines is one of the many reasons very smart people think we may be living in a simulation. But this is only one interpretation and it's very possible that we're viewing it through the lens of the current information age which is programmed to simulate real world concepts and so of course the simulations work like the real world. But do our simulations work the same as the real world from an extradimensional creature gazing into our universe like a child with an ant colony? Probably not, and it's equally possible we are not living in a simulation at all. The result (virtualized digital simulations based on reality as we know it) cannot be used as data (scientific measurements of reality) to determine how reality works. Not without a control of course, among other things.

@HienNguyen-ec2dl - 2024-06-04

So, this is the secret behind Itachi's Amaterasu.

@Kropolis - 2024-06-25

what

@xavierpadilla4113 - 2024-06-27

Litwrally my first thought was "I can be an Uchiha now"

@HienNguyen-ec2dl - 2024-06-27

@@xavierpadilla4113 yea me too haha

@ironhell813 - 2024-06-30

Interesting. It’s all Hocus Pocus to me….

😂

@TheJadeFist - 2024-07-06

No that's based Emo-ness.

@ramous5182 - 2024-05-27

imagine getting your youtube channel advertised by your uncle Steve Mould, what a move!

@piripiro - 2024-05-31

15:22 is something that I didn't expect to see, but I was glad it was there.

@bradseeker - 2024-06-14

how do you mean? db isn't more than a couple years old... right? oh god

@hagnat - 2024-09-05

i had to scroll more than i expected to see someone talking about this
i am glad we all were here to see it

@baronvonbeandip - 2024-09-17

What a throwback. I miss /b/

@bl3df0rdays - 2024-10-12

I feel strangely violated, and yet still glad

@thatretrocattt - 2024-06-14

He's going to summon the 3 witches from Hocus Pocus like that 💀

@DAMIENDMILLS - 2024-06-24

Finally someone else makes a reference.

@ironhell813 - 2024-06-30

Heh

@wj04 - 2024-07-18

And yet not a single person has mentioned virginity

@ryanjohnson3615 - 2024-05-27

Best line: "Its a weirdly polarized topic now and I don't like being shouted at."

@LuisSierra42 - 2024-05-27

Sad but true

@SangheiliSpecOp - 2024-05-27

At least hes honest about it instead of dancing around the topic without being blunt like most people these days (talking about any uncomfortable topic in general). It's refreshing to see

@dpatts - 2024-05-27

@@SangheiliSpecOp I love the shade (embrace the pun) Steve's throwing at EnChroma here....
"If they pass the happiness versus money test,
and you don't care about their dubious marketing practices,
and you don't care whether they make you happier than a placebo pair of shades under clinical testing conditions,
then maybe EnChroma glasses are for you."

@chaos.corner - 2024-05-27

I feel like an opportunity to make a polarization pun was missed.

@JeffGoris - 2024-05-27

I'd prefer it if he straight up voiced his opinion on EnChroma glasses. Most YouTubers love controversy in their comments. Was Steve more worried about being shouted at, or litigation?

As a colourblind person, EnChroma makes me angry. Basically a scam.

@banolitrex420 - 2024-05-27

"because id be dead" got me spitting out water lmao

@dibenp - 2024-05-27

Where? 12:30. You’re welcome.

@eamonburns9597 - 2024-05-27

Why couldn't the T. Rex eat pizza?








Because it was dead.

@JimiFargo - 2024-05-27

@@dibenp Thank you kind person

@andreasu.3546 - 2024-05-27

That line, the way it was delivered, gave me Jeremy Clarkson vibes. Probably just me though...

@cappuccinski - 2024-05-28

I forced my beloved to watch this section and they laughed harder than I did, which was wonderful

@cebo494 - 2024-05-28

I'm colorblind and have a pair of Enchromas. They do make it much easier to distinguish reds and greens, but they're not magic and I certainly don't see "new colors" I couldn't see before, although my colorblindness is not that severe either so I won't discount other people's experiences.

But the best demonstration I've been able to find of their effectiveness is rose bushes. For the most common types of red-green colorblindness, the red polka dots on a green background look that rose bushes have is especially problematic. From any sort of distance away, the roses lose their definition and start to just look like darker parts of the bush. But with the Enchromas, they pop out really strongly from the bush, even from quite a distance. So it's not so much that they help you to see new colors, as much as they improve your ability to distinguish and apreciate colors you could always see. It's not like (most) colorblind people can't see red or green at all, it's just a lot harder to distinguish them from each other in most situations.

Additionally, for all people (including normal-sighted people) they generally improve contrast and make all colors seem a bit more vibrant. I'm almost surprised that they haven't caught on as a luxury glasses brand just for the way they make everything look "more vibrant than real life". Although, that effect is really only true in especially good lighting.

@kenbrown2808 - 2024-05-28

I saw a review from a person who described them as making it easier to identify colors he normally had trouble with.

@Syuvinya - 2024-05-28

The reason that non-colorblind people aren't buying these glasses is that they make certain colors harder to see and comes with severe color shift

@Nico_M. - 2024-05-28

Regarding how Enchromas work. Given that computer and phone screens use RGB leds, i.e. they are specific colors that "trick" our brain into thinking we're actually seeing all the colors, do colorblind people have an easier time discerning colors in a screen vs. real life? If all Enchromas do is to supress the overlapping, then there shouldn't be any overlapping in screen leds.

@ShinyQuagsire - 2024-05-28

I have to wonder why they don't just take advantage of stereoscopy, like there's this meme of "impossible colors" created by seeing one color in one eye and one in the other. You'd think technically it'd be possible to give difficult colors a stereo difference (maybe that's uncomfortable though)

@cebo494 - 2024-05-29

@@Nico_M. I've never actually thought about this before. It kind of makes sense, but I definitely still have trouble with colors on screens sometimes. I don't think it's any less, but I couldn't tell you why.

@Collectivelyconscious8-1 - 2024-06-23

11:06- best explanation of electron spin I’ve heard yet. Thanks Steve!

@SupraTompan - 2024-05-31

Here in Sweden, I miss the highway sodium lights upon startup (I remember them shifting from purple/blue/yellow/deep red/orange to the final yellow light).
A late summer evening with a clear, rather dark sky, seeing the sodiums start up into the distance... awesome.

@TeddieBean - 2024-06-03

You just unlocked a childhood memory for me! Completely forgot this is how things used to look when I was a child ☺️

@Milkmans_Son - 2024-06-06

​@@TeddieBean Colors are the keys. When I was 7 my parents shipped me off from Seattle to visit relatives on the east coast. Over 3+ weeks of constant entertainment, I remember exactly three things. The birds Connecticut (the only bright red, yellow, or blue birds in the northwest are found in zoos), a blue lobster in Maine, but mostly I remember flying into Chicago at night. My parents had no idea what the hell I was talking about, so I didn't find out until years later that Chicago was the first city in the country to switch every street light over to sodium vapor. I just happened to pass through shortly after, and it looked absolutely amazing.

@litttoe - 2024-06-08

I'm from USA, but I vividly remember light being different as a child. The sun was less white, more yellow. And the street lights were a hazy sunset color, amazing memories. Those industrial white buzzing lights were way too sharp. Nowadays either my senses have changed or light is different.

@maddockemerson4603 - 2024-06-09

@@litttoe Most likely your memories are faulty. The sun is often portrayed as yellow because we know it's made of something like fire and the only time of day you can safely look at it for a second or two the light that gets through is either yellow or red, but the actual light emission from the sun is white. So unless you grew up in LA when there was visibly yellow smog, you're just remembering things wrong.

@Me-zo8yc - 2024-06-19

They were awful and they turned the sky a horrible murky orange colour.

@sebastianthor546 - 2024-05-27

Back in my physics days, you could look up all of these lines and transitions in textbooks. Or on NIST, but that page seems to be strugging. I did the looking up for you:

The 819nm transition is a 3d-3p transition. The other ones are from higher orbitals, 5s-3p for 616nm and 4d-3p for 569nm.

@Muonium1 - 2024-05-27

That peak in the IR is actually another doublet at 818.3 nm (3d2D3/2 → 3p2Po1/2) and 819.5 nm (3d2D5/2 → 3p2Po3/2). See "Surrogate measurement of chlorine concentration on steel surfaces by alkali element detection via laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy" in Spectrochimica Acta B by Xiao et al.

@SteveMould - 2024-05-28

Thank you!

@millsyman1 - 2024-05-28

I love the NIST page for this. It has exactly what you need and no more: https://physics.nist.gov/PhysRefData/Handbook/Tables/sodiumtable3_a.htm

@StraveTube - 2024-05-28

15:22 Dammit, Steve. I can't believe you've done this.

By the way, your description of spin & quantized angular momentum was one of the most interesting one's I've encountered. I'm definitely going to have to keep coming back and rewatching that segment to wrap my head around it.

@QuantumPolagnus - 2024-06-02

Damn, I'm glad you brought up that timestamp; I wasn't really paying much attention at that point and totally missed that detail.

@2Goood - 2024-06-04

shoutout dickbutt

@dhillaz - 2024-06-05

😏

@dolst - 2024-06-07

I didn't want to seem like a Dick, Butt I saw it too.

Surf Wisely.

@VakarisJ - 2024-08-12

My physics professor once bemoaned sodium street lamps getting phased out. Apparently, it's extremely useful in astronomy, as you can't normally see the stars because of light pollution. Yet with sodium street lamps, all you needed to do to make your telescope work was to put on a filter, blocking sodium's emission.

@Chumblefunk - 2024-05-27

Was that a hidden richard butt in the colorblind test? lol

@THE-X-Force - 2024-05-27

HAHA! YES! I didn't notice it the first time .. (15:23)

@VocalMabiMaple - 2024-05-27

Not just that, but it's a full dickbutt

@howarddavies136 - 2024-05-27

It's an old meme, but it checks out 😂

@markliamdairr - 2024-05-27

I came here to see if anyone else noticed it too 😂

@VocalMabiMaple - 2024-05-28

Youtube ate my first comment lol, but I was identifying it specifically as a dickbutt.

@manafestation - 2024-05-27

15:07 "It's a weirdly *polarized* topic now..." * puts the sunglasses on as a the Who song starts blasting *

@vorcanvorcan9032 - 2024-05-28

Those old street lights are nostalgic af...

All the memories of being driven back home from visiting family, late at night and falling asleep to the sound of the moving car and the atmosphere created by those old street lights. 🌃

@Augusto9588 - 2024-05-29

And they didn't block out the night sky as much

@angrypotato_fz - 2024-05-30

Reminds me of coming late in the winter evening from the university, passing through a dim park with big yellow spheres as lanterns... A bit eerie, uncomfortable, but also dreamlike...

@SuperAWaC - 2024-05-31

we are making a mistake by not keeping them

@bitonic589 - 2024-06-01

😢

@bitonic589 - 2024-06-01

​@@SuperAWaCit's good that LEDS replaced sodium in some ways though, the monochromatic color completely removes your color vision, so it might be hard to identify some street signs.

@MatBat__ - 2024-06-08

This video is amazing. Your casual explanation of spin to get to the why of the double lines emmiting form sodium was marvelous, I love when I get answers to questions I didn't know I have.
And I'm totally using that orbit analogy to explain this.
Thx for your content, cheers Steve

@okojijoko - 2024-05-27

Corridor Crew also did a video where they used a set of sodium lights to essentially re-create vfx similar to what was done on films like Marry Poppins. It involved an interesting camera set up, but resulted in a more defined chroma-keying to where you don't have to worry about other colors bleeding into the void.

@THE-X-Force - 2024-05-27

That was a really interesting video.

@Dave01Rhodes - 2024-05-28

Yeah, you need to split the incoming light so you can get the image without the sodium color, and the image with just the sodium color. Then you can invert the sodium-only image to use as a matte for the non-sodium image.
Since it’s all achieved optically, background replacement can be done entirely with film and an optical printer. And since sodium light is such a narrow wavelength, it doesn’t bleed into anything you want to keep and you get near-perfect transparency.

@oo0OAO0oo - 2024-05-28

Please never stop doing these kinds of videos. You are literally broadening my horizont. There are many things that are far out of my reach, knowledge wise, and you tap into them, but you also make me understand enough. It really is fun and exciting to watch videos like this. Not necessarily because of the topic, but because of how you are driving us in your bus through knowledge town. Sightseeing with you is fun, not boring. It's pleasant and exciting to learn more and to see the world a little bit through your eyes. (Or rather mind really lol).

Thank you for putting this effort into your videos!

@pocket83 - 2024-06-06

Wow, I can't believe that I've never put two and two together, but I honestly didn't realize until now that sodium street lamps render color useless. It's not that I'm color-blind or anything; it's just a sort of conceptual understanding I've not stopped to consider enough for it to sink in. Always just thought of it as 'weird orange.' Amazing what you can miss! Thanks.

@liam3284 - 2024-08-02

There are two kinds of sodium street lamp. High pressure sodium which still has colour, and low pressure sodium which is true monochomatic light.

@johnfoster6412 - 2024-06-20

I'm diagnosed with deuteroanomaly, and I've had opticians really push the enchroma lenses. "You'll see what everyone else can see!" they cry. But what will I lose? I seem to see things in nature they don't. I'm not convinced. Thanks for the very balanced perspective on a somewhat contentious issue. Well Done!

@Bob-Fields - 2024-06-21

EnChroma is a scam. "But what will I lose?" Your money.

@takiktos1265 - 2024-08-16

You can find YouTube videos exposing lies of enchroma and similar glasses.
Also you should probably change your optician if they push this crap

@hermi1-kenobi455 - 2024-09-22

My brother was convinced to get those glasses by some YouTuber when he was young. My dad saved up for it and they eventually arrived. No different. Broke my brother’s heart. He moped for weeks, the YouTuber had really convinced him he could see like other people.

@AdamNovagen - 2024-05-27

I can't believe Steve slipped Dickbutt into a colorblindness dot test 💀

@sakelaine2953 - 2024-05-28

I think it is the best

@fUtal1mistake - 2024-05-28

Bro I want but can't like you comment

@akselor - 2024-05-28

Where was thet? I was wondering about top raw middle to the right image that I can not understand at 15:37. Is that it? Or do I have a color blindness?

@leonschoendorf1700 - 2024-05-28

@@akselor It´s the one at 15:21

@erikstevens2072 - 2024-05-29

Glad I wasn't the only one

@patu8010 - 2024-05-27

"I wouldn't see that dip if I was doing this experiment in the vacuum of space - because I'd be dead." That had me rolling

@SanojBerg - 2024-05-28

I loved that joke 😂