Henry Reich
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Following7 Creators
September 28, 2015 04:56:34
September 17, 2015 16:18:32
August 13, 2015 17:53:38
July 20, 2015 15:57:06
Marcin Maciejewski Black background works perfect with this content! Wonderful episode Henry!
July 22, 2015 09:41:02 · Reply
Patrick W. Gilmore This is The Best Thing I've seen from Minute Physics, and I love this channel. Thank you, Henry. This is exactly why I became a Patron.
July 23, 2015 20:18:18 · Reply
Henry Reich Thanks so much!
July 24, 2015 00:34:43 · Reply
SoHardToKill "This video has been removed as a violation of YouTube's policy on repetitive, misleading or inappropriate metadata." WTH..!?!?
July 25, 2015 10:26:56 · Reply
Henry Reich Apparently including Neil deGrasse Tyson's name in the tags and description made someone at youtube think I was spamming :/
July 26, 2015 20:31:31 · Reply
July 16, 2015 17:22:55
Michael Richters You think you can't initiate a turn without counter-steering? Not true, as my kids demonstrate to me daily in our bakfiets. Yes, of course simply leaning your torso to one side will cause the bike to tilt the opposite way, but you are neglecting lateral forces that one can apply against the road through the tires. Most bicycles don't have frictionless tires.
July 16, 2015 17:45:57 · Reply
Henry Reich Lateral forces only come from being off balance, not from simply leaning. In order to actually start falling, you must have counter steered (perhaps unintentionally) at least a tiny bit. It's very hard to notice sometimes.
July 16, 2015 17:49:27 · Reply
Michael Richters Counter-steering is certainly the usual way of doing it, and it can be very subtle, but it is not the only way to create the lean necessary for a turn. This would be obvious if you rode a bicycle with a passenger (who has no access to the steering mechanism). When they shift their weight around, they transmit forces through the tires, resisted by the road, causing a lateral wight shift. This effect is not subtle, and is completely independent of my steering motions. Also, if you think active counter-steering is the only way to create a lean, how do you explain the fact that people steer bikes hands-free?
July 16, 2015 18:01:39 · Reply
Henry Reich Ah, I see what the confusion is - by "counter steering" I just mean that the handlebars will turn, not that they have to be actively turned by a rider. For a passenger I'm sure they make it harder to steer, and can change the weight distribution considerably, but if the passenger moves to the right, the bike should lean to the left. Which way does it steer then? If you search for "bricycle" you will find videos of a bike that's been modified to make it un-steerable by leaning.
July 16, 2015 18:13:54 · Reply
Henry Reich I guess what I'm trying to say more specifically is that for a balanced bicycle moving in a perfectly straight line to initiate a turn in one direction, the front wheel contact point has to first move slightly (often imperceptibly) in the other direction. This is a mathematically demonstrated fact.
July 16, 2015 18:19:08 · Reply
Michael Richters Oh, yes, I'm familiar with the "bricycle". You're still failing to understand one thing, though. When the passenger moves laterally, he does push on the bike. And the *bike* leans the opposite way, but that's not all that matters. What really matters is not the angle between the ground and the vertical axis of the frame; what matters is the lateral position of the center of mass of the bicycle/rider system and the point of contact at the ground. If I push against the frame, some of that force leans the bike, but some is resisted by the road, because the wheels don't slip. That moves the center of mass laterally without any steering.
July 16, 2015 18:58:36 · Reply
Michael Richters Something you could try that might convince you (or perhaps you'll see a flaw that I haven't) — stand on one foot, and jump to one side. Then do the same and jump to the other side. You didn't have to first move your foot out from under you, did you? The same should be true of a bicycle. The fact that the rider is free to apply forces from many different points in many directions greatly complicates the question, doesn't it?
July 16, 2015 19:04:20 · Reply
Henry Reich A foot is totally different - it has multiple contact points with the ground, allowing you to apply torques at the ground which help you start leaning in various directions. Where is the torque coming from on a bike to move the center of mass away from the contact point? The rider certainly can't create that torque from inside the system just by changing their mass distribution inside the system. An outside torque/force not at the pivot point is necessary. Gravity is this force (hence the unrideability of the bricycle).
July 16, 2015 19:13:30 · Reply
Michael Richters It can be done on ice skates, too, which are even narrower than bicycle tires. But since that doesn't convince you… Let the rider lean one way, the bike the other way, the let the rider exert a force along the rider's axis, which is now not in line with the point of contact. You must see that this force would be resisted by the ground, and allow the center of mass of the system to shift laterally. This is almost identical to a man in a canoe, who moves from the front end to the back end. The canoe moves under him so that their colnective center of mass doesn't move — but only if there is zero resistance from the water. If we replace the water with a more viscous fluid, that center of mass moves more, until that fluid becomes effectively solid, and the canoe doesn't move at all. The bicycle also doesn't have complete freedom of motion. Lateral forces, even internal ones, cause the bike to lean, but they also push the bike's tires against the road, and that resultant force from the road causes the system's center of mass to move.
July 16, 2015 19:36:21 · Reply
Sergio I Montserrat S And this effect is more noticeable in a bike, where wheel mass and rotation are higher, thus the forces involved in keeping the vehicle upright are higher, and thus riders have to consciously apply counterrotation when they are learning to drive. We don't notice in bicicles because forces are smaller.
July 17, 2015 02:04:25 · Reply
Sergio I Montserrat S It doesn't compare, since the foot and ice skates don't have a torque that works as a gyroscope that actively resists a change in inertia. All other examples you gave also fail to include a gyroscopic stabilizing influence.
July 17, 2015 02:08:24 · Reply
July 1, 2015 05:43:12
Mitch Etzkin Great Video! Very interesting :-D Also, are you guys playing Ultimate at the 0:33 second mark?!
July 6, 2015 14:13:15 · Reply
Sergio I Montserrat S Thank you! This is the kind of science videos that make me like your channel and supporting your efforts. Love to see the process of analysis behind phenomenons of life.
July 9, 2015 02:27:01 · Reply
June 25, 2015 16:25:58
June 16, 2015 14:44:19
June 1, 2015 02:33:26
Lightbow Sorry to comment on packaging rather than content, but I was surprised to see one of the longest, raciest YouTube advertisements I've ever seen before what's supposed to be a kid-friendly educational video. I'm not offended or anything, but if I were to have the same experience in front of a classroom of kids, I'd be totally fired. I thought the point of Patreon subscriptions was to cut the need for stuff like this. How much money would you need to raise per video (either on Patreon, or via corporate sponsorship) to cut out ads entirely?
June 2, 2015 15:04:26 · Reply
Henry Reich This is a good question, thanks for asking and I'm sorry you had to sit through an inappropriate ad. At this point I've been turning off overlay ads on new videos as well as turning off unskippable pre-roll ads (like the one you watched) for the first 24 hours or so of new videos, so if you watch right away you don't have to see ads (or at least you can skip them). I don't have a set number goal for turning off all ads for the first week a video is live, and one potential issue is that a lot of patrons put a cap on their monthly contributions, so the full amount listed on the patron page (minus transaction costs and patreon.com's cut) is only for one video/month, any additional videos receive a significantly lower level of pledges. Henry
June 16, 2015 15:02:14 · Reply
Sergio I Montserrat S I second Lightbow's question.
June 14, 2015 22:56:37 · Reply
May 20, 2015 17:47:18
May 13, 2015 10:56:38
May 1, 2015 20:19:18
Chase Turner Enjoyed the surprise reference to the mechanical adding system -- thanks for including that!
May 2, 2015 17:00:14 · Reply
April 22, 2015 17:02:34
Cole Palmer All of your videos are always so good. This one is no exception!
April 22, 2015 18:53:52 · Reply
April 9, 2015 20:10:01
April 8, 2015 18:07:13
March 26, 2015 18:47:15
Timur Sultanov Done already... Can you post in Activity links to videos when they are released on vessel? Will be a little bit easier to track them that way...
March 27, 2015 02:27:50 · Reply
March 24, 2015 08:19:13
Ho Yin Cheng Ok, so I had already signed up for Vessel yesterday (same year offer, but from LinusTechTips) and tried it out. Before I list my thoughts on the platform, I have a question: Does early access on Vessel mean that videos come out slower on YouTube? If so, then why would I bother continuing to support you via Patreon (formerly, Subbable - yes I've been supporting since day 1)? The only reason I'd have left for supporting you is for the sciences, and while I'd love to do that, I'd probably much rather put those types of donations towards the education charities that I try to support. Now for my thoughts on Vessel as a streaming platform (copy pasted from my comment to Linus): 1. Signup forces you to subscribe to categories and follow people to continue? I literally don't subscribed to anything outside of two types of videos so I had to just pick one randomly to continue. (ended up just removing everything after signup) 2. I don't have too many Firefox plugins installed, but usually all websites work. But Vessel is completely broken and tells me to upgrade my browser. Uhhh... sure. I'm actually on the latest version of Firefox, so what gives? 3. The website homepage is laggy as hell because they animate parts of the videos in some of the previews. Why do this? The previews are also so large that I can 100% see this being a pain in the ass to use to see what new content came out once you're subbed to more than a few people. 4. The video player is not responsive. It's hard to get the controls to appear without pausing and resuming (in fact, it seems impossible - try doing it in fullscreen). 5. Control menu has so many design quirks (looks and feels like default Bootstrap so badly that I wonder how many real UI designers they have on their team) that it simply feels clunky to use. They made so many UX mistakes that the website actually feels amateurish. Overall, I'm glad to see all YouTube creators trying to break their dependence on YouTube. However, I think your usage of Vessel is not representative of common users. Especially those of us who are such heavy users of streaming services that we actually pay for them (as I do via Patreon). For us, Vessel is a pretty poor platform. Thank you for reading this, and I hope you can pass along these comments, and similar ones, to the other YouTube creators who are also pushing to Vessel.
March 25, 2015 10:48:09 · Reply
March 23, 2015 15:40:24
March 22, 2015 16:47:12
March 21, 2015 21:58:41
Henry Reich Trying out photoshop, not sure how I like it. I don't screen capture - I wrote a script to export the photoshop history.
March 23, 2015 15:24:33 · Reply
Henry Reich Ps you missed the point of this post which was that you can ask questions directly in the activity feed, not just as comments to my posts! :)
March 23, 2015 15:36:57 · Reply
Hugh O'Brien Why is the moon always aligned with earth? Was it always this way or would it seem to spin?
March 23, 2015 13:05:19 · Reply
Henry Reich I have just the video for you... Ever hear of a little channel called MinuteEarth? https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=6jUpX7J7ySo
March 23, 2015 15:23:20 · Reply
Henry Reich Ps you missed the point of this post which was that you can ask questions directly in the activity feed, not just as comments to my posts! :)
March 23, 2015 15:36:47 · Reply
Hugh O'Brien Now that's a quick turnaround. Thank you.
March 23, 2015 17:29:05 · Reply
Michel Payette Hello Henry, The sun is about the same size as the moon when we look at it from here, if the sun was hollow and a photon would emit from one side, and travel in strait line through the center...(and if we could see it) then it would require something like 4 seconds to reach the other side ! This make it easy to follow with the naked eye...seems almost slow !
March 23, 2015 15:16:22 · Reply
Henry Reich Interesting way of visualizing light speed - Also, the sun is HUGE!
March 23, 2015 15:26:43 · Reply
Henry Reich Ps you missed the point of this post which was that you can ask questions directly in the activity feed, not just as comments to my posts! :)
March 23, 2015 15:36:28 · Reply
March 20, 2015 19:35:47
Chase Turner My having stared at computer screens for 30+ years, I took the dark lines for granted -- thank you for explaining the "why" of those dark artifacts! Somewhat related (from a "what is the math that drives what we see") is a talk by Steven Wittens -- start 4 minutes into the talk and listen for two minutes to see if the whole of the talk is of interest. See http://acko.net/tv/webglmath
March 23, 2015 13:46:41 · Reply
Sam Rossetti Photoshop do so by default only in RGB; if you work in LAB or CMYK it seems it handles blurring correctly.
March 25, 2015 07:51:45 · Reply
March 18, 2015 05:39:36
March 4, 2015 00:00:59
January 22, 2015 18:26:52
December 22, 2014 17:00:58

