КОМЕНТАРІ
@luc1xn
@luc1xn 2 дні тому
i wanted to understand how they work to make my own, and this helped alot, thanks!
@buddyliftchannel2291
@buddyliftchannel2291 3 дні тому
For IPhone 4s, it used a coin vibration motor instead of that cylindrical one
@Baller14_
@Baller14_ 3 дні тому
This is a BRUSHED MOTOR. BRUSHLESS IS BETTER
@andrewliberman7694
@andrewliberman7694 4 дні тому
Thanks!
@Toasted_butBoscoGamingYT
@Toasted_butBoscoGamingYT 6 днів тому
Why there’s no Asia’s solar eclipse I want to see I haven’t see solar eclipse years ago😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😢😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😢😭😭😭😭😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😭😭😭😭😭😭
@third16273
@third16273 3 дні тому
There is but it was in before
@DanielKolbin
@DanielKolbin 9 днів тому
moment
@Mars0984
@Mars0984 10 днів тому
This makes more sense now thanks. I also found out that on the 2 weeks preceding or following a solar eclipse is a lunar eclipse
@JacekNasiadek
@JacekNasiadek 13 днів тому
The 6-month transfer described in the video is not actually the minimum delta-v Hohmann trajectory. The Hohmann transer would take about 9 months. The 6-month transfer already has a trajectory that intersects rather than touches the Mars orbit. The reason the 6-month transfer is favored for a manned mission is that it allows for a free return in case something goes wrong during the mission and the crew decides to return without landing on Mars.
@benj1008
@benj1008 14 днів тому
Is it true that during a solar eclipse the moon appears to change direction? I can't quite picture in my head why that would be the case.
@helenmurphree3434
@helenmurphree3434 14 днів тому
That doesn’t seem like enough daylight hours for mid summer. Is Seattle that much farther north than Montreal
@masonmori8669
@masonmori8669 16 днів тому
Such an easy to understand visualizer with good explanation too, thanks
@lisulove
@lisulove 17 днів тому
ukposts.info/have/v-deo/oKeVZZWDjKVhsWQ.html
@g.a.christian4119
@g.a.christian4119 18 днів тому
You answered my question.Thankyou very much.What a task !!
@robertfindley921
@robertfindley921 18 днів тому
You can convert between horsepower and watts by multiplying by 746 (approximately). This is easy to remember because it's 1/2 of the year Columbus discovered America. 1492/2 = 746.
@robertfindley921
@robertfindley921 18 днів тому
Very nice explanation and animation.
@andrewcabile3015
@andrewcabile3015 20 днів тому
why does the spacecraft not fall to earth when it slows down?
@LordofStarsChannel
@LordofStarsChannel 20 днів тому
Nice video, but there are some pretty big mistakes which stops me from sharing it. At 3:00, the prograde and retrograde vectors are inverted. At 4:17, you start saying why not burning at Earth, and you then explain the radial out burn, also with a wrong illustration, showing radial in. 4:50, you describe radial in, but the illustration shows radial out.
@Nightscape_
@Nightscape_ 20 днів тому
I needed more videos.
@helix5648
@helix5648 21 день тому
So the earth is not flat?
@paulmicks7097
@paulmicks7097 22 дні тому
Wish this Xcrap would stop, dumb when it began, stupid when everyone started doing ... Most people don't understand Mr Xmusk is taking billions from the American people in over-profitized contracts and tax breaks, basically the privatizing NASA to make excessive profits instead of keeping NASA a public asset.
@KratosAurionPlays
@KratosAurionPlays 23 дні тому
Makes sense
@__________________________hi52
@__________________________hi52 23 дні тому
It actually does happen twice a year, but most the time the fish see it and we miss out
@nsa45-bp5lv
@nsa45-bp5lv 20 днів тому
Not only that, but some of them are partial-only when the umbra goes just over or just under the earth and only the penumbra is visible. One of these is happening next spring. Some parts of Quebec I think get up to like a 90% partial but nobody gets a total. As stated in the video, if the moon is not within a few days of perigee at new moon when it is near a node, it will be too small to cover the sun and you'll get an annular eclipse like in 2023 in the parts of the US. There are even hybrid eclipses where it switches between annular and total over the path.
@fishfeet100
@fishfeet100 23 дні тому
Oh, cool.
@deathsheir2035
@deathsheir2035 24 дні тому
And let's not forget oribital precession, meaning the time in which the moon crosses the lunar nodes, isn't exactly the same either. How much of a difference that precession causes I do not know, I just know that it plays a role, even if it is small.
@PoinationsYT
@PoinationsYT 24 дні тому
It’s cause angles of the orbits
@flwi
@flwi 24 дні тому
What a great explanation! I didn't really know about the details of the different engine designs. Well done!
@rampageGentil
@rampageGentil 25 днів тому
What causes the moon nodes to change
@PowerSerge
@PowerSerge 25 днів тому
If it were every month then it wouldn’t be special.
@guestacc77
@guestacc77 25 днів тому
Got a new information 🤝✨
@ADMusic1999
@ADMusic1999 25 днів тому
For those wondering, eclipse season is not quite every 6 months. It’s 5 months and some change. I looked it up because I was wondering how 2017’s eclipse was in August and this one was April.
@stghesonetap
@stghesonetap 25 днів тому
😂😂😂😂😂
@burnbabyburn-od5sy
@burnbabyburn-od5sy 25 днів тому
funny how they only have cartoons of space LIERS
@JohnnyApplePie15
@JohnnyApplePie15 16 днів тому
There are literally countless photos of and from space
@Gimmickvr
@Gimmickvr 25 днів тому
3:31 you mean under the sun
@Archangel657
@Archangel657 25 днів тому
So why dont we have a 2 eclipses somewhere on Earth every year? Why are they instead so rare and uncommon?
@WeirdestAnimations
@WeirdestAnimations 25 днів тому
POV you live in arizona, haven't been in the path of totality for total or annual eclipse since 1806 and won't until 2205
@nighthawk0077
@nighthawk0077 25 днів тому
wow good job. No fluff, straight to the point
@i_g_man
@i_g_man 25 днів тому
why doesn't one happen every 6 months then?
@WeirdestAnimations
@WeirdestAnimations 25 днів тому
They do, though most happen in remote places such as the oceans, Antarctica, and way up north in Canada and Russia where practically no one lives. None of these are total eclipses, and nobody even bothers to talk about something no one or very few people will witness.
@Jutty04901
@Jutty04901 26 днів тому
There is a solar eclipse that happens every 6th new moon.
@deepfry89
@deepfry89 26 днів тому
Business is booming for videos related to solar eclipse
@kidsavage200iq
@kidsavage200iq 26 днів тому
1 minute
@Tartzs
@Tartzs 25 днів тому
@@kidsavage200iq2 hours
@VideoManDan
@VideoManDan 26 днів тому
That's no moon, it's a space station.
@Falloutgaming29
@Falloutgaming29 26 днів тому
Proof
@WeirdestAnimations
@WeirdestAnimations 25 днів тому
@@Falloutgaming29 hate to be that guy but ErM.. TeChnEcLly, the moon and anything rotating around an object is a satellite. In hindsight maybe not a space station, but the moon, Earth, sun, milky way are all satellites. But it is kind of stupid to call them such, as a much more fitting definition I would use is some man-made operable object orbiting a celestial body that must have some sort of useful function.
@Tangobutton
@Tangobutton 26 днів тому
AI voice? It said 'Imporrant' instead of 'ImporTant.' Maybe want to fix that. The T is not silent.
@WeirdestAnimations
@WeirdestAnimations 25 днів тому
Now that I think about it, so many channels use that voice! Wow. I can't believe the only time I noticed it I thought it was some sort of voice actor people higher. I guess AI just makes much more sense! I really don't know why I haven't known that earlier.🤦‍♂
@animationsxplaned8835
@animationsxplaned8835 25 днів тому
Nothing on this channel is AI! Not the script, voice over or animations. I believe the voice filters that assist with clarity and balance are to blame for that pronunciation! Thanks for watching!
@WeirdestAnimations
@WeirdestAnimations 25 днів тому
@@animationsxplaned8835 Ah, OK.
@David-yy7lb
@David-yy7lb 26 днів тому
Explain why an eclipse totality path has never taken the exact path and location in the past and will never take the same path and location in future eclipses...for example April 8 2024 eclipse will a future eclipse hundreds thousands millions or billions of years later take that same exact path if not why?
@Nikola95inYT
@Nikola95inYT 26 днів тому
I don't know about that... but in 600 mln years there'll be the last total eclipse, as the Moon is moving away from Earth and at some point it won't be able to cover the Sun completely.
@WeirdestAnimations
@WeirdestAnimations 25 днів тому
Everywhere on Earth has once been in the exact path, not sure how many times but it will continue. EXECPT: the moon moves away from Earth. Billion(s)/million(s) of years later no more eclipses, and billions of years ago, because the moon was so close to Earth, it would just be nighttime for a few minutes or hours when it is supposed to be day. No cool color on the horizon, or hallow around the moon from the sun's corona. Also, the MAIN leading point: eclipses generally happen more frequently the higher north you are. So if you are 70 degrees north you get more than someone who is -70 degrees (south). As such THEORETICALLY, the probability you get a place with the same path is possible especially if you are really high north. HOWEVER, eclipse paths vary in shapes and sizes and lengths so really if you have the an eclipse happen with the same exact path with the same exact length, the same exact shape, and the same exact width then it is really really really unlikely to happen.
@coolguydoesstuff7876
@coolguydoesstuff7876 25 днів тому
its actually only about 300 years apart before a total eclipse goes to the same area.
@WeirdestAnimations
@WeirdestAnimations 25 днів тому
@@coolguydoesstuff7876 Right, yes that is on part. But if it is exact path, then it is identical to a previous path. Like if one time the eclipse path was straight in Russia, with a width of like 10km, length of 20 km. The next eclipse would have to have the exact same. So for one to pass through the same cities, then yes it could in 300yrs, but for the exact same path then maybe a lot longer.
@coolguydoesstuff7876
@coolguydoesstuff7876 25 днів тому
@@WeirdestAnimations hey there! Yes, for the exact path, it would take SIGNIFICANTLY longer. But for the same LOCATION it would take roughly 300 years
@cg0825
@cg0825 26 днів тому
The moon revolves around earth and earth around sun and the orbits are elliptical not circular. Also the sun's distance from earth can be anywhere from 91 to 93 million miles. Two million miles is about the distance to the moon and back four times. Just knowing this it's clear there are lots of factors then add in that orbits are not on a flat plane but tilted as mentioned in the video
@reflactor
@reflactor 26 днів тому
Great explanation. Thank you.
@animationsxplaned8835
@animationsxplaned8835 25 днів тому
Glad you liked it
@TheCNYMike
@TheCNYMike 26 днів тому
So Musk's plan hinges on something that hasn't flown successfully as of this date using the most fuel-efficient orbit it can and having to burn a ridiculous amount of fuel to slow down. And even with orbital refueling, you still have to get that fuel off the ground.
@garystill1308
@garystill1308 26 днів тому
Think it would of been handy to mention that 1 Lunar node causes Totality and the other causes Annular elicspe cause it makes the moon further away.
@kilroy987
@kilroy987 26 днів тому
(because there SHOULDN'T BE) - <- UKposts titling pattern. It's the algoirthm
@RandomChannel982
@RandomChannel982 26 днів тому
Underrated channel! Deserves a sub
@animationsxplaned8835
@animationsxplaned8835 25 днів тому
Thanks for the sub! I really appreciate it!
@Mr.Das1983
@Mr.Das1983 26 днів тому
Thank you for this amazing animation. I knew about the orbital mechanics of moon and earth and also that solar eclipses only happen in spring and late summer (or very early fall) time, but the animation made it so simple to understand. 👍
@VitalEwe
@VitalEwe 25 днів тому
Not entirely they happen either in summer or winter
@animationsxplaned8835
@animationsxplaned8835 25 днів тому
Glad you enjoyed it!
@908animates
@908animates 26 днів тому
just play spaceflight simulator or ksp, learned it on my own