World's Most Exciting Chemistry Movies
Michael Buckbee writes: "After Dan's page got too slashdotted to view, I ran a quick search on Google for more more fun Ferroliquid sites and stumbled into a collection of movies that I wish had been taken in my chemistry classes. Almost all of the experiment descriptions lean heavily on the phrase "EXTREME DANGER" and many contain other fun words like: "Explosion", "Toxic", "Detonation", and "Diazotization"."
>Almost all of the experiment descriptions lean heavily on
>the phrase "EXTREME DANGER" and many contain other fun
>words like: "Explosion", "Toxic", "Detonation", and "Diazotization"."
Sounds like MSNBC's coverage for the past week...
Umh... those were cool chem movies.
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Sorta like the 'light my fart' pictures that those morons in high school were always trying to take.
Blue flames abound, but we were always puzzled by the one guy who produced green flames. Never did figure out how.
; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
But where's Debbie does Dallas? I thought there was extreme chemistry in that movie ;0)
Why do today what you can put off until tomorrow?
Here's a short depiction of what I'm trying to accomplish. If you've got any ideas - pass them my way...I've got a balloon of ferrofluid suspended inside a tube filled with the water - attached to the walls. Outside the tube I have a configuration of solenoids, hooked up to deliver a magnetic field in sequence starting at one end of the tube - and stepping to the other end. The effect should expand the balloon to the walls of the tube, and the stepping of this bubble down the tube should propell the water... Hopefully in a smooth fashion. I've got everything working except the sequencing drivers for the solenoids, so it's looking good so far.
I never got around to trying to build an MHD fountain that would shoot salt water up in the air past a large magnet and a pair of electrodes. Has anyone tried this kind of a project?
Well You could have knocked me down with a feather.
Na Cl
Need a light, Salted
Maybe one of these days I'll actually be able to watch the movies that slashdot links to.
Maybe one day, when Apple files chapter 11. We can all dream, can't we?
I thought slashdot was the one website that understood my computer's needs.
I like the page on dan's site (linked to from dan's site?) that has movies of all sorts of interesting things getting fragged in the microwave... And I thought all it was good for was ramen noodles and Windoze/AOL CDs... ^_^
Friend: "The NIC is misconfigured..." Me: "No prob, I'll just telnet in and fix it." *Silence*
Our HS chem teacher was nice/crazy enough to allow us to do any experiment we wanted as long as it wasnt too dangerous. So I ended up doing the Nitrogen Triiodide experiment. I think I made too much cause we went without using one of the fume hoods for a month. Everyone was too scared to go near the filterpapers because they would spontaneously react. It was fun watching the lower divistion classes jump when some would spark drung a lecture.
I have Quicktime installed on all 6 of my machines and I didn't pay a dime. Quicktime is FREE SOFTWARE.
How about "World's Most Slashdotted Chemistry Movies" ?
This is the place where you write something that will make you seem like a complete idiot.
It should be quite easy to use mod_rewrite in apache to set it up to respond to all requests where the referer contains "slashdot.org" with a '404 slashdotted' response. Perhaps such a configuration it should come as part of the default apache config ;).
The actor David Duchovny, aka Fox Mulder of X-Files fame, has an unknown, very dark past. This photo proves that he was, during WWII, a member of the Croatian Waffen-SS legion 'Waffen-Gebrigs-Division der SS "Handschar"' (he is the second from the left). Probably it was fears that this dark fact would become known that prompted his dismissal from the TV-series. One can only speculate about the atrocities he has committed and taken part in, as this particular legion, mainly recruted among Bosnian Muslims, was notorious for it's brutality.
I remember when they tried to market the movie "2(VLSPADKTNV KAAWGKVGAH AGEYGAEALE RMFLSFPTTK TYFPHFDLSH GSAQVKGHGK KVADALTNAV AHVDDMPNAL SALSDLHAHK LRVDPVNFKL LSHCLLVTLA AHLPAEFTPA VHASLDKFLA SVSTVLTSKY R)2(VHLTPEEKSA VTALWGKVNV DEVGGEALGR LLVVYPWTQR FFESFGDLST PDAVMGNPKV KAHGKKVLGA FSDGLAHLDN LKGTFATLSE LHCDKLHVDP ENFRLLGNVL VCVLAHHFGK EFTPPVQAAY QKVVAGVANA LAHKYH)", but apparently the audience wasn't prepared for something like that. They had to rename it "Hemoglobin". Some people still didn't quite get it, so it became "Bleeders".
Invalid form key: nL4l7BanYg !
Help savingAmigaOS and a free PowerPC market
MTV Press Release: Following in the footsteps of the controversial show "Jackass," MTV proudly presents a similar show for those of the chemical persuasion: "Jackass Chemistry." Tune in each week to see your favorite nerds mix things that should not be mixed together. Watch the halarious explosions and poisonous gas clouds that follow! For mature audiences only. WIK
Oh dim one, what would you have said if the movies could only be played by Windows Media Player?
QT is free as in beer. It is not free as in speech. The original AC has a valid point. There are versions of QT that aren't free.
These pages are currently /.'ed, but they sell 5 CD-ROMs of these videos for
$60 each to individuals in the USA, more for multi-user and non-USA.
People bend over so readily to proprietary stuff that by the time it becomes mandetory by law, most people won't even notice.
No way am I gonna "Register" with Apple to view
web content. They can kiss my ass.
Why use a ferrofluid for this? Why not just a regular piston made of iron with a rubber ring to keep the seal?
For that matter, why involve magnetism at all? Why not a simple mechanical piston? That eliminates the solenoid problem.
324006
I had an excellent chemistry teacher back in high school! He used to create huge gas filled bubbles in class and light em up, toss chunks of sodium and potassium into water, etc etc. I don't know how much chemistry I actually *learned* in class, but he certainly knew how to get our attention!
I Am My Own Worst Enemy
I know the Netscape plugin will work, but is there a way to get it without haveing Netscape installed?
It was me, I did it, I moved your cheese
I never got around to trying to build an MHD fountain that would shoot salt water up in the air past a large magnet and a pair of electrodes. Has anyone tried this kind of a project?
:).
I tried building a railgun once, which worked on exactly the same principles (run current through a metal projectile perpendicular to a magnetic field).
My projectile was a shred of tinfoil. It twitched, but didn't move. Then I did the calculations to find out exactly how much current I'd need for a decent amount of force on the projectile.
Even with a very strong magnetic field (think "one tesla"), you're going to need a silly amount of current to apply enough force to give a nice fountain effect (think "hundreds of amps"). This will heat your water up quite a bit, and give you quite a lot of hydrogen and chlorine gas as a byproduct if you're using saltwater.
It should still be do-able; I'm just warning you that it won't be as easy as you might hope
Use a nitrate as the electrolyte and you'll avoid the chlorine gas problem (you should get hydrogen and oxygen).
Or is this what you want?
uh and what format would that be exactly? Linux can play all the windows media formats...
Reverse engenere the codec and write your own player for linux. Didn't some kid do something like this so he could watch DVDs on his linux box?
I know I may be talking out of my ass on this becaues I have no idea how to reverse engenere anything right now and there could be an issue with the DMCA. But, one can learn how to do this and FUCK the DMCA.
Thank you.
I thought Anne Tomlinson had resigned, hasn't she? And the formkeys nonsense only has appeared long after her resignation.
That's interesting. What application do you need for that?
Get a life, mate
Is it nice under your bridge?
It'd be more useful to just have slashdot mirror all the pages we link to.
Mod point free since 2001
"After Dan's page got too slashdotted to view, I ran a quick search on Google for Slashdot's next victim..."
Maybe more people would study chemesty if they followed the example of Britney's Guide to Semiconductor Physics.
You must have QuickTime 4 or later to play these movies. If you do not have QuickTime, you can download a free copy from Apple Computer.
"The Most Fun Possible on 4 wheels" is at SunBuggy in Las Vegas
I had a professor who used to make trays of this stuff and then film flies blowing up on touchdown.
I think he'd sniffed a bit too much benzene over the years.
668: Neighbour of the Beast
When I saw the words "chemistry movie", the phrase "THIS IS A CHEM-STUDY FILM!!!" immediately ran through my head from high school. That was the first line of the world's most boring science videos, which I'm pretty sure were old when I was in high school (78-82).
That one that sticks out in my mind that was the most unintentionally hilarious teaching movie I've ever seen was this one that had this incredibly old guy. He seemed to move in slow motion, and as he slooowly spoke, he would insert these looooong pauses with a big "uh" in the middle. Like, "here we have our,,,,,,,,,, uh,,,,,,,,,, apparatus to perform the experiment". Then he would use these bad measuring devices that he would (I'm not making this up) tap on to make the needle move, until the right result came up. The class was rolling on the floor during this movie. It was so bad.
Thinking back on them now, I'm wondering if they were really as boring as I remember (although that one above was clearly baaaaad), or if I just remember them through the lens of a punk teenager. :)
Are chem-study films still around? I would imagine they must have been remade by now. I'm pretty sure the ones I watched were made in the 60s.
Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
Green in the flame usually means there is iron present.
.
(Oh man, this is such fertile ground
mplayer will do it.
.dll files) they're relatively easy to get to use on linux (I say relatively easy as in respect to say, getting the sorenson codec out of the quicktime binary or the realplayer one out of realplayer). I use mplayer 'cause it plays mpeg and avi files, where last I checked (some time ago) avifile only plays avi's.
avifile might, dunno, never used it.
They both use the windoze codecs, and since media player has their codes installed through the standard windoze multimedia properties (they're all separate
mplayer's damn good, but it's not gui - you skip through the movie using arrow keys and pgup/pgdn. Once you get used to it, you'll still wish for a slider, but you'll wish that the programs that had sliders also supported the keyboard. I hope when they do finish they gui (they're workin' on it) they keep the keyboard controls.
I've only found a couple of files that mplayer won't play correctly - and with those files _nothing_ would play them correctly. I collect a lot of movies (3 stooges episodes, simpsons, full-length movies, etc.) so I've tested it out pretty well.
Those who can't do, teach. Those who can't teach either, do tech support.
This reminds me of a movie I saw in chemistry back when I was high school. Apperently, this teacher was cleaning out the supply room at his school and found some big (on the order of a kilogram) chunks of sodium and potassium metal. He took them out to an abandonded mine with a lake-size puddle that needed its pH to be more balanced, and tossed in the metals. The reactions lasted several minutes. It was pretty cheesily narrated - including a part where the mad scientist in charge pointed out that even the cameraman was wearing safety glasses. The videotape was pretty grainy. It makes me think it got passed around from chemistry teacher to chemistry teacher.
Don't forget white phosphorus. It spontaneously combusts at room temperature, like a Spinal Tap drummer.
Speaking of /.'ed...
Dude, F=BLI. There's no squaring at work here. You'll need 100's, if not K and M amps to do anything resembling a railgun.
:).
But, P=I^2R. Your Joule heating will be considerable. You'll need some good engineering so that your toy won't disintegrate itself.
And V=LdI/dT. You'll need city bus size capacitors and hydrogen thyratrons to switch massive currents quickly. For railguns we're talking mega-amps in 20 nanoseconds.
Depends on what you call a "railgun".
If you're trying to make a small water fountain, you can get away with a newton of force or less. You'd also be working in continuous mode, which means a capacitor bank isn't needed (just a DC or approximately DC power supply that can provide the needed current).
One-tesla magnets are easy to buy or build - about one tesla is the saturation point of most ferromagnetic materials, so a chunk of iron will turn a 0.01-T or 0.001-T solenoid into a 1T magnet in short order (depending on the permeability of garden-variety scrap iron).
Similarly, high-strength permanent magnets will be in the Tesla range (probably more like half a tesla, but still strong enough for our purposes).
At one tesla, for a force of 1N, and assuming a water tube 1 cm wide, a current of 100 amps is adequate. A step-down transformer, a bridge rectifier, and a wall plug, and you're there.
For a proof-of-concept tabletop railgun, you can similarly relax constraints. If I'm trying to fling, say, a 10g segment of copper plumbing pipe across a room, I don't need a capacitor bank - I need a marine battery. If I can fire the projectile at 10m/s, that gives me a good 5m or so before it hits the floor from tabletop height (10m if I fire it at an angle instead of level); more than enough for a party trick. At that low a speed, it's in the railgun for tens of milliseconds or longer - I don't need nanosecond discharge circuitry. My hypothetical 10g projectile would have a kinetic energy of about half a joule, which means that if my railgun is about a foot and a half long, I again need only 1N of force. A marine battery can supply the required 100 amps of current without any problems at all (in fact, I'd want to drop a resistor in series with it to make sure it doesn't supply much more than that when I short the railgun across it).
Preventing the slug from spot-welding itself to the rails is left as an exercise for the reader
In summary, while I'd need heftier electronics to build a military-grade weapon, tabletop railguns and similar motor-principle conversation pieces aren't that hard to build.
[Aside: I'd actually build a coilgun instead of a railgun if I wanted a military-grade weapon. Much, much easier to build at high power than an ultra-high-current railgun (it's just a series of high-power RF or IF coils repelling the slug with induced currents). Even here, millisecond-level timing is perfectly adequate.]
I've got a book publiched in 1974 with an article and pictures on ferrofluids.
This entire thread reminds me of a 2 year old - he covers his eyes, and the whole world disappears. Uncovers them, and there it is again. Not knowing about something doesn't mean that it doesn't exist.
at least that's what the high school chemistry teacher told us. Given the jar of metallic iodine that wasn't carefully controlled, we made a TON of the stuff, though obviously in very small batches. At one point, someone rolled a glass rod down the chem lab bench, with small snapping sounds the whole way. The chem lab also overlooked the stadium, and was used for spotting and shooting game films. Someone noticed the odd snapping sounds when walking across the floor.
That looked like an 'incautious' amount of the stuff piled on those filter papers.
Incidentally, as long as the stuff is wet, you can do anything you want with it. It doesn't get touchy until dry.
For further reading, R.A.Heinlein used the stuff in "Farnham's Freehold".
The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
In reading some of the comments here, I get the disturbing feeling that what most of us learned in science classes was "How to blow stuff up real good!"
I never had any chemistry classes, but I don't think a day went by in our electronics class when someone did not catch something on fire. My favorite was the day we hooked a 2N2222 randomly up to 120v and watched it light up. Since it only lasted a few milliseconds we decided to liquid cool the sucker.
So, we wired one up, put heat shrink tubing around it, dunked it in a glass of water, and let the current flow. That dude lasted about 25 seconds before all the smoke was let out.
But nothing beats the day I was at my friend Tom's. We were in his lab in his basement and were just goofing around with something on an o-scope. He was rummaging around in the closet for something and ran across some great big 1000V capacitors that came out of some HV power supply. These things were huge. Tom slapped it down on the desk, hooked it up to a power supply, and proceeded to charge it up. I was talking to someone on Tom's 2m ham rig and was watching out of the corner of my eye as he started to throw stuff across the terminals. An aluminum can got two big holes blown in it. a paperclip blew in half. Needless to say what he was doing was causing loads of interferance and I could only get a few words of what I was listening to. I asked the other station to repeat.
Then the interferance really started - though it was not due to the spark gap transmitter that was just a few feet away. It was because of me laughing. Tom got the idea to drop a piece of aluminum foil across the cap and it stuck to the terminals. He reached down to pull the tin foil off and burned his hand, yelled "damn! that's hot!" then picked up the cap and tossed it back in the closet. I was laughing so hard I had to sign off cause I could not talk for about 5 minutes.
How I wish that had been a Kodak Moment.
This article is kinda funny to me, being a link to a UW chemistry page. I went and checked out these videos, and this is a section of an out-of-lab exercise I had to do for my first semester Chemistry class at the UW.
My vote goes to Dr. Erlich's Magic Bullet. It stars Edward G. Robinson and Ruth Gordon. (remember Harold and Maude?) Dr. Erlich's Magic Bullet is about the quest for a cure for syphillis. Very weird movie for 1940, and very watchable. It gives some insight into the sexual morals of old Europe. And man oh man did they have some weird chemicals for "curing" syphillis. There really was no cure until Erlich came up with his "magic bullet". This movie is a must see for all geeks.
My main concerns were whether the BB would melt from the friction on the track (even rolling, it would experience some), and whether I could build this without wrecking something (about a year before I had nearly burned the house down while drying a sugar-based high-temperature ignitor I built to start magnesium strips on fire, so I was real safety conscious).
Anyone else ever try this at home?