The video owner has disabled playback on external websites.
This video is no longer available on YouTube.
This video cannot be played right now.
Watch on YouTube
KI-gestützte Lerntools freischalten
Registriere dich, um leistungsstarke Tools zu nutzen, die dir helfen, schneller aus jedem Video zu lernen.
The Surprising Secret of Synchronization
Lernstatistiken
GER-Niveau
Schwierigkeit
Untertitel (214 Segmente)
The second law of thermodynamics tells us that everything in the universe tends towards
disorder. And in complex systems, chaos is the norm. So you'd naturally expect the universe
to be messy. And yet, we can observe occasions of spontaneous order, the synchronization
of metronomes, the perfectly timed orbits of moons, the simultaneous flashes of fireflies,
and even the regular beating of your heart. What puts these things in order in spite of
nature's tendency for disorder.
London was opened to much excitement. But as crowds filled the bridge, it began to wobble
back and forth. Police started restricting access to the bridge, but that only resulted
in long lines to get on the wobble was unaffected. Two days later, the bridge which had cost
18 million pounds, was fully closed, and it wouldn't reopen for another two years. So
what went wrong?
Well, it's long been known that armies should break step when crossing bridges. This dates
back to an accident in 1831. When 74 men from the 60 of Rifle Corps were marching across
the Broughton suspension bridge in northern England. It collapsed under their synchronized
footsteps. 60 men fell into the river 20 of whom suffered injuries like broken bones or
concussions. Luckily, no one was killed. But after this, the British Army ordered all troops
to break step when crossing bridges.
Now look at the people walking across the Millennium Bridge. Most of them are walking
in step with each other. But they are not part of an army. They're random members of
the public so why are they walking together? And why couldn't a modern bridge designed
for heavy pedestrian traffic handle this? Well, to understand it, we have to go back
350 years.
In 1656, famous Dutch physicist Christian Huygens created the first working pendulum
clock. The goal was to help sailors figure out where they were on the globe. Latitude
can be judged by measuring the position of the sun or stars. But for longitude you also
need to know the time at some fixed location, say your home port. But clocks at the time
were routinely out by around 15 minutes a day. So they were effectively useless. wagons
pendulum clocks by contrast, were accurate to around 10 to 15 seconds per day. Huygens plan
was to attach his clocks to a heavy hanging mass on the ship, so they wouldn't get tossed
around by the rolling seas. His plan called for two clocks in case one stopped or was
damaged.
But testing out this arrangement while at home sick in February 1665. He made a remarkable
discovery. To have his clocks hung from a wood beam across some chairs. Watching the
pendulums sway back and forth for hours. He noticed after half an hour or so they would
spontaneously synchronize. As one clock swung one way, the second would swing the other
way. As one would tick, the other would talk.
So he tried disturbing the clocks. He set them ticking out of sync but again, within
30 minutes or so they were back to the same lockstep. Wiggins thought this strange sympathy
of clocks must have been caused by air currents between the pendulums, so he placed a large
board in between them, but their clocks continued to sync up. It wasn't the air currents.
When he separated the clocks, the synchrony would disappear, their times drifting apart.
But when he brought them back together, the synchrony returned. Wiggins realized the two
clocks were synchronizing because they were hung from the same wood beam. He transferred
Vollständige Untertitel im Videoplayer verfügbar
Mit Übungen trainieren
Erstelle Vokabel-, Grammatik- und Verständnisübungen aus diesem Video
Kommentare (0)
Zum Kommentieren AnmeldenRegistriere dich, um alle Features freizuschalten
Verfolge deinen Fortschritt, speichere Vokabeln und übe mit Übungen
Interaktiver Modus
Quiz
Richtige Antwort:
Ähnliche Videos
THIS ONE THING Determines Whether You Will Be SUCCESSFUL OR NOT! | Les Brown | Goalcast
Is it normal to talk to yourself?
Joel Interrogation BADASS Scene - The Last of Us Part 1 Remake
Bonfire Night Explained: The Gunpowder Plot! 🎆 | Newsround | News For Kids
SOLO TRAVELING IN PORTUGAL | exploring lisbon, trying new food, yoga retreats, horse back riding, et
Veritasium
Quiz
Richtige Antwort:
Quizfragen erscheinen beim Anschauen des Videos
Merkhilfe
Aus diesem Video
Kostenlos Sprachen lernen