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  • Hey it's me Destin welcome back to Smarter Every Day. So I've been learning a lot about guns underwater,

  • which is pretty cool. I mean, in the first video I learned all about what's happening back here

  • in the action. But the problem is because of limitations in my setup I didn't get to see

  • what happened when the bullet exits and goes into the water. Now I really want to see that,

  • so I had to think about it for a while and I had an ah-ha moment. You see instead of building an aquarium

  • that was keeping the water in with the gun, I built this, to keep the water out.

  • But the problem is, even though I built all this cool stuff and got my hands on one of the

  • best high speed cameras on the market, I didn't have enough hands to run it all.

  • So I invited some friends to help me.

  • It's gonna work. - Yeah? - Yeah. - Sickeningly good.

  • (Destin) I was hoping to get

  • the widest view possible, that we can get inside that mirror.

  • - So, we're gonna have to be as close to the mirror as possible with the wide angle otherwise we'll see the rig won't we. - I think so.

  • (Destin) What kind of lens do you think you're gonna use? - Lens...

  • So you're gonna be in the middle. - So we should have a lens, shouldn't we? [laughs] - We should have a lens. [laugh]

  • - The problem with doing an AK under water is that

  • I can't trigger the camera, so that's the Slow Mo Guys who've come to help me.

  • So what are you gonna run? - Run the Phantom v1610 today which goes up to

  • 18,000 frames per second at 720p.

  • - I can't count that high. - Definitely more than.. you've got fingers.

  • - Can you zip me? - Unless you're from Alabama. - Alright just to show you how cold

  • it is when we're doing this, that's about 40 degrees.

  • And it is cooold. So the camera's gonna look into the top mirror, it's gonna bounce down

  • and then basically it's a periscope under water. I've got the gun here...

  • You can see it there, with the phantom.

  • [gun cocking]

  • [gunshot]

  • [gunshot] [bubbles]

  • [gun clearing]

  • [slowed down gunshot]

  • [multiple bangs]

  • Alright, it has been very consistent. We're getting about

  • 5-6 feet of bullet travel.

  • [gunshot]

  • [slowed down gunshot]

  • [slowed down gunshot]

  • [bangs]

  • [gun clearing] OK. So, what did we just learn?

  • You can see that there's gas that comes out right here. It's a little gas bubble.

  • And the reason that's happening is because it's.. the piston is venting just

  • when it gets past... [laugh] I can't talk I'm freezing. As the bullet goes

  • down the barrel it passes this gas block and pushes gas against this piston.

  • Now you can see it starts to move the bolt but watch what happens.

  • Right there, it opens up this little gas port. That's why there's a bubble right

  • there during the shot. So if we take this off, you can see that the piston

  • vents after it goes only about a 1/4 of an inch back. If you think about

  • it that's cool because this very short pressure impulse is enough to overcome all the springs

  • and the friction in the weapon and cycle it, simply due to inertial forces.

  • [gunshot]

  • [gunshot] [water spray]

  • Oh gee.. it's cold. [laughter]

  • Alright, so... So now we're gonna do over the shoulder?

  • - Yeah, yeah. Over the shoulder shot. - Alright.

  • (Destin) All clear to load? - Clear to load.

  • - Clear to fire?

  • - Clear to fire. - 3.. 2.. 1.. [gunshot]

  • (Destin) Weapon's clear.

  • - Ohh.

  • - Did you get it? - I got it. I'll go check it.

  • [slowed down gunshot]

  • [multiple bangs]

  • [slowed down gunshot]

  • [music]

  • [slowed down gunshot]

  • [bangs]

  • [underwater gunshot]

  • Yeah. I know that was gonna be cool, but not that cool. Let me try to explain what I think's going on here.

  • So we got this oscillation that you can see after the shot in the bubbles. That's awesome.

  • I didn't understand why the bubble would start back up after it collapsed. But here's what's going on.

  • There's an equation called the Rayleigh-Plesset Equation that describes everything a bubble does under water.

  • It's too hard to solve by hand, you've gotta use computers to figure it out but this is basically what's going on.

  • At the initiation point you have a super high pressure inside of a bubble and it begins to

  • impart momentum to the fluid around it so it begins to grow. At some point

  • it passes the point where the pressure inside the bubble is equal to the pressure outside the bubble and it continues

  • to grow until eventually the water stops it. Now at this point you have low pressure

  • inside and high pressure outside so it begins to collapse again, and because of fluid momentum

  • it goes again beyond that equilibrium point and begins to compress.

  • So it gets a super high pressure on the inside again and boom, another shock wave

  • and the process starts all over again. This oscillation occurs until you dissipate

  • all the kinetic energy in the system. Now at this point of

  • tightest closure, you have the highest pressure. At this point sometimes something can occur

  • called sonoluminescence. Sonoluminescence occurs when you get a flash of light

  • when a cavitation bubble is collapsing. Now as much as I want to believe this

  • is sonoluminescence I'm pretty sure it's just a really cool reflection from the sunlight above the pool.

  • But it's still really interesting that it occurs at the point of collapse. I wonder why

  • that's happening. OK there's something else we need to talk about. This is my favourite shot.

  • Originally I thought that the first gases out of the barrel were from where the bullet

  • exits and the expanding gases from the cartridge flowed around it, but look again.

  • Do you see that black colour trailing down the length of the bubble? That's the burnt gunpowder being

  • released from the barrel behind the bullet. So if you follow that powder down the bubble, it should

  • line up with that bullet. Yeah, there it is. So what's the first white cloud then?

  • If you have a flowing liquid and you speed it up, the pressure of that fluid drops.

  • Now it seems a little bit backwards from how it should be, but this is what happens. It's called

  • the Bernoulli principle, where flow is high and pressure's low. So let's look at this

  • phase diagram for water. The water we were in was about 4 degrees celcius and about

  • 1 atmosphere. If we drop the pressure of the water below a certain point

  • the water turns to vapour. The inside of the barrel was full of water before we

  • shot right? And so the bullet pushed it out at a very high speed. So where

  • flow is high, pressure's low. Cavitation is happening in the barrel on the

  • front side of the bullet. I'm still trying to wrap my head around this but there it is.

  • You can actually see it in the video. Once the bullet punches out of this cavitation cloud something else

  • is happening. You'll notice that the bubble on the right looks like a cloud and the bubble

  • on the left looks more like glass. Andrew Davidhazy took some awesome

  • shatter graphs of bullets in flight which show the shock wave on the front of the bullet. The area behind

  • the shock wave is lower in pressure. It turns to vapour. Because this

  • low pressure region has a smoother flow boundary it looks more like glass

  • instead of the fuzzy cloud look caused by the turbulent flow coming out of the barrel. So there you have it.

  • You're not just shooting a bullet out of this gun, you're shooting three different things.

  • Now that we understand the physics behind cavitation you can clearly see the effects of each of these three

  • components in the high speed video. Oh yeah, and we also understand bubble bounce now too don't we.

  • So a huge thank you to Gavin and Dan the man from the Slow Mo Guys. They came all the

  • way to Alabama to help me shoot this video. That's a pretty big deal. So we re-did a video

  • on their channel, something I did a while back, pistols under water, only we used a v1610.

  • It's awesome. Go check it out on their channel, it's totally worth your time.

  • On my channel the intent here was to make an awesome video that you enjoyed and you also learn something, and

  • perhaps earn your subscription. So, if you think I got close, we got a little chemistry going on,

  • check out part 3 of this video, Russian frogmen guns. Yeah, they exist.

  • So I got my hands on some of those. I still have the ninja scope 3000 or whatever we're gonna call that thing.

  • You kinda see where this is going. Anyway, I'm Destin, you're getting Smarter Every Day,

  • have a good one. So we actually selected this pool for a reason.

  • Jimmy Neutron lives in the middle of nowhere, so if the bullet got away from us, everybody down range would be safe.

  • Please be smart, don't try this. So check out how he cuts the glass.

  • [scratching] Huh?

  • [snap] (Destin) What? What did he just do?!

  • [laughs] (Destin) Get away from my computer, get away from my computer!

  • Alright we got the bullets. There was no damage but

  • you can definitely see the grooves from the rifling in the barrel.

  • [ Captions by Andrew Jackson ] captionsbyandrew.wordpress.com

  • Captioning in different languages welcome. Please contact Destin if you can help.

Hey it's me Destin welcome back to Smarter Every Day. So I've been learning a lot about guns underwater,

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秒間27,450フレームの水中AK-47(パート2) - Smarter Every Day 97 (AK-47 Underwater at 27,450 frames per second (Part 2) - Smarter Every Day 97)

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    Wang Chih-Wen に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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