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  • Hey, Vsauce. Michael here. And Jake. And Kevin.

  • And we are in Santa Monica, which

  • of course means that the "V" in "Vsauce" will stand for the Roman numeral five,

  • as in five questions

  • from you guys.

  • Our first question comes from "@notch".

  • He didn't ask this of me in particular, but I love how non-intuitive the

  • answer is. Assume

  • an Earth that's perfectly spherical

  • and a rope, stretched around the equator snugly.

  • What would happen if that rope was just, say, six meters longer? Six meters

  • isn't very much,

  • but because of the relationship between a circumference

  • and a radius,

  • six meters of extra rope would allow the entire rope to not fit snugly around

  • the earth,

  • but one meter above it,

  • all the way around.

  • That's cool, but what if instead of a rope

  • we used something more rigid, like a structure, a bridge

  • and we built the bridge all the way around the Earth.

  • And then, all at once, destroyed its supports.

  • Would it

  • float? Clearly the earth's gravity would pull the structure down,

  • but down is in the opposite direction for the other side of the bridge.

  • Well, it turns out

  • such a scenario would be incredibly unstable. Earth's gravity isn't equal

  • everywhere, and if you follow @tweetsauce you saw some great graphs showing

  • just how much gravity changes,

  • simply based on the density of rock below.

  • When you factor in the Sun and the Moon, you wind up with a bridge structure that is

  • not gonna stay where it is. If the bridge itself was indestructible, it would start

  • violently hula hooping around the earth, crushing things. But there's no

  • known material strong enough to do that. Instead, you would wind up with

  • bridge pieces flying everywhere.

  • A sphere around the earth would be a bit more stable, but a ring?

  • Not so much.

  • The ring, even if spinning, would rapidly break apart into smaller pieces.

  • Last week you guys asked me a question that I have always wondered.

  • Let's say I was stranded in the mountains, waiting for rescuers to arrive,

  • but it was going to take

  • a while. I had plenty of snow and plenty of water,

  • but I was hungry -

  • dying of starvation -

  • would it make sense

  • to

  • amputate one of my legs

  • and eat it? I mean,

  • it kinda makes sense, right?!

  • I'd have my entire leg to eat as food, which would probably fill me up

  • and I would have one less limb

  • that I would need to keep alive.

  • The only problem is that the trauma your body would endure from the loss of a

  • limb

  • would greatly exceed the benefit you would get by eating the food. You're better off keeping

  • that limb

  • on your body,

  • because your body's process of using reserves of energy is more efficient than

  • the process of digestion. So keep the leg on

  • and let it wither away, keeping you alive. Don't cut it off and eat it and digest it.

  • How does hair know when to stop growing?

  • It's a good question,

  • because the hair on my arm, which

  • there's a lot of, never grows any longer than this.

  • And if I were shave my arm off, it would grow back and stop

  • right where it is right now.

  • But head hair is different.

  • For instance, my hair - what's left of it - would keep growing if I didn't cut it.

  • But no other animal has that situation. You don't see wolves out in the forest

  • saying, wow, look how long my hair is getting, I better get to the barber shop.

  • So, why do humans have head hair that grows so long,

  • but body hair elsewhere that stops seemingly right when it's supposed to.

  • Well, first things first.

  • The hair on your head will not keep growing for ever.

  • Typically around six years of growth is the limit.

  • When hair grows, it is in what is known as its anagen phase. And for hair on your

  • head that phase can last

  • up to six years.

  • But the anagen phase of hair elsewhere on your body - eyebrows, eyelashes -

  • is much shorter.

  • Except in cases like this guy, whose eyebrows grove like head hair and

  • have allowed him to set the world record for longest eyebrows.

  • Humans probably lost their fur coats, their thick body hair,

  • because it didn't really help us hunting and running around sweating on the savannah.

  • And unlike other animals, us humans had discovered fire

  • and could make clothing

  • to keep ourselves warm without needing a built-in fur coat.

  • To be sure, long hair that falls over your ears and neck can keep you warmer.

  • But leading theories also argue that long head hair may be

  • our fault.

  • A result of the fact that early humans

  • picked mates that could grow longer hair on their heads.

  • Mates that could do that were probably healthier

  • and in colder climates literally had a built-in hat

  • to keep their body warm.

  • One of the questions I get the most is about eye floaters.

  • Those little dots or squiggles that you see in your vision, especially when looking at

  • a bland scene, like the clear blue sky.

  • Eye floaters are made out of little fibrals that occur in your eye

  • as you age. And you can't look directly at them because they're inside the fluid

  • of your eye. Turning your eye to look at them simply causes the fluid to move

  • and the floater as well. But the thing about eye floaters that I love the most is

  • that they are almost always

  • microscopic.

  • You can't see them with the naked eye,

  • except when they are inside

  • your eye.

  • If you were to pull an eye floater out, you wouldn't be able to see it. But in your eye,

  • it's close enough to the retina

  • to leave a shadow on the retina and that's what you see when you see eye

  • floaters.

  • Finally, how much would Wikipedia weight

  • if i printed all the text out

  • and bound it into books? Well luckily,

  • there's a Wikipedia article about this very topic.

  • The English-language Wikipedia contains about two billion three hundred and

  • forty five million words, which,

  • if printed at the density of the Encyclopedia Britannica, would equal

  • about

  • 1,759

  • volumes.

  • Which would look

  • like this.

  • Altogether they would weigh about 7,000 pounds.

  • If you're between the ages of 13 and 18,

  • you may want to check out

  • the Google

  • Science Fair.

  • It's an amazing competition. These guys are great. They actually helped

  • make that Earth bridge animation for me.

  • So be sure to check out

  • GoogleScienceFair.com.

  • And I'll keep checking out Los Angeles. I'm here

  • with Kevin and Jake from Vsauce2 and 3

  • for the first time ever.

  • The three of us have never been in one location simultaneously until now, so be

  • sure you're subscribed to us, because amazing videos

  • will come soon.

  • And as always, thanks for watching.

Hey, Vsauce. Michael here. And Jake. And Kevin.

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B1 中級

自分を食べるべきか? (Should You Eat Yourself?)

  • 3 0
    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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