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Videos (76) | Sift Talk (0) | Blogs (1) | Comments (75) |
Videos (76) | Sift Talk (0) | Blogs (1) | Comments (75) |
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Flywheel Projectile
No slowmo of the last grass cutting?
what a jip [sic]
Great Collection of Crazy Walks in Slow Motion
Tags for this video have been changed from 'japanese, walking, running, slowmo, hip hop, luv, nujabes, street, silly' to 'japanese, walking, running, slowmo, hip hop, luv, sic, nujabes, street, silly' - edited by blutruth
That's Close Enough
If you watch the slowmo, he just got really close to them. "Swamped their lame asses" is, I believe, the technical term.
You do not get a whale dropped on you and not die.
Morganth (Member Profile)
Your video, Jellyfish Stinging in Microscopic SlowMo, has made it into the Top 15 New Videos listing. Congratulations on your achievement. For your contribution you have been awarded 1 Power Point.
Rare access to 'eighth wonder of world' - BBC News
Well... it is. In 2001 a grocer was convicted for using scales which only showed imperial weights, but that doesn't mean that the people have wholeheartedly adopted the system (see this article from BBC News Magazine for example).
I visited in 2002, and found that it was metric enough to make it comfortable for an Australian We were visiting a friend who is a vet nurse... who would weigh animals at work in kilograms, but herself in stones. If you've watched Gav and Dan in the slowmo guys videos, they measure distances in centimetres, inches, metres, kilometres, and miles.
Might I also point out that the U.S. is also officially a metric country, and has been for 148 years, after an act of congress was passed authorising the use of metric weights and measures in 1866 (ref http://science.howstuffworks.com/why-us-not-on-metric-system2.htm), and having been the only English speaking country to become a signatory to the Metre Convention (in 1875).
"21 feet by 6 feet"
I thought UK was on the metric system.
The Slow Mo Guys - Cannon Firing in Slow Motion
The second in the hugely entertaining series "The Slowmo guys sell out"
Skydiving in Slowmotion
Tags for this video have been changed from 'slowmo, sebastian, angle flying' to 'slowmo, sebastian, angle flying, Sigur Ros' - edited by Trancecoach
BASE Jump Goes Wrong....In Glorious HD!
Man, watching that shard/ledge/middlefingerofgod come at him in slowmo was terrible.
Periodic Videos - Liquid Oxygen - In Slow Motion
Tags for this video have been changed from 'slowmo, high speed camera, liquid oxygen, elements' to 'slowmo, high speed camera, liquid oxygen, charcoal, elements' - edited by lucky760
T-o-o-o-o Close To The Ship Launch.
not a dupe of
http://videosift.com/video/Best-Fails-of-the-Week-4-May-2013
Since this video has a replay in slowmo
*timeshift
Shred of the Month
Oh man, the slowmo guys need to get one of those.
10fps Nikon D4 Shutter Burst - Slow Mo
Am I the only one wanting to actually see the shutter in real-time instead of in slowmo?
Bottles beware! He has a Katana
Ok, #18, at 1:05, in slowmo, with the wind blowing his hair after, is rather poetic.
Momentum, Magnets & Metal Balls - Sixty Symbols
I think that's what we would see. It also follows that the first ejected ball would leave with a much greater velocity than the second ejected ball as the second collision from the incoming ball would have been much smaller. Now I want to know what would happen if there was only one ball after the magnet. What do you think?>> ^oritteropo:
Based on that, I wonder if a slowmo of the ball in the original video might've shown that it bounced slightly before coming to rest?
Momentum, Magnets & Metal Balls - Sixty Symbols
Thanks
I was actually going to suggest that the first part of the experiment should be fairly easy to replicate, with a track and marbles or ball bearings or similar. Unless you have a constant grade the velocity (and therefore momentum) calculations will be a bit tedious, and it occurs to me that angular momentum may have some effect too, so perhaps a video camera and some marks on the track (or sensors and a microcontroller) to directly measure the velocity just prior to impact would be easier. To confirm or disprove my assertion you want to keep increasing the momentum of impact until it's more than the momentum of a two balls, and see what happens.
There are videos of a Newton's cradle type setup only with different sized balls, I might go looking tonight.
p.s. Didn't find that one, but did find a good explanation of the one vs two ball collision issue in Newton's cradle:
Based on that, I wonder if a slowmo of the ball in the original video might've shown that it bounced slightly before coming to rest?
>> ^messenger:
That shoulda been @oritteropo too.