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

AI 학습 도구 잠금 해제

가입하여 모든 동영상에서 더 빠르게 학습할 수 있는 강력한 도구를 이용하세요.

장면 설명 표현 찾기 플래시카드 복습 섀도잉 연습 되말하기
무료 회원가입
영어 15:04 Science & Tech

6 Times Scientists Were Wrong About the Periodic Table

SciShow · 107,690 조회수 · 추가됨 2개월 전

자막 (318 세그먼트)

00:00

“Water. Earth. Fire. Air.” Aristotle may  not have had a poster of the periodic table

00:06

on his bedroom wall growing up.

00:08

But he sure did have an idea about  what everything on Earth was made of.

00:11

That idea was very, very wrong, of course,

00:13

even if it did help spawn a  beloved television series.

00:16

But over the following millennia,

00:18

scientists slowly worked things out.

00:20

By the time Dmitri Mendeleev published his  original version of the periodic table,

00:24

in 1869, there were 63  elements that scientists knew

00:27

made all the matter we can  see, touch, and so forth.

00:30

Part of that was thanks to  advances in scientific theory,

00:33

like Dalton’s concept of the atom.

00:35

Part of it was thanks to advances in  scientific methods and technology.

00:38

But the path from 63 to the current  118 elements was not straightforward.

00:42

In fact, there are many times scientists  thought they had discovered a new element,

00:46

but didn’t.

00:47

So many in fact, you could make  a SciShow List Show about it…

00:50

[intro jingle]

00:53

Here’s a lie that your teacher might  have told you when you were young:

00:55

“Sunlight is made up of all  the colours of the rainbow.”

00:58

And by “lie ”, I mean it’s so close to true

01:00

almost no one is going to call that teacher out.

01:03

Except for when it actually matters.

01:04

Like right now.

01:05

In the early 1800s,

01:07

the German glassmaker Joseph von Fraunhofer

01:09

split sunlight up into its constituent colors

01:12

using a device he invented called a spectroscope.

01:14

And he found 574 dark lines  in the otherwise full rainbow.

01:19

In other words, a bunch of colors were missing.

01:21

These lines turned out to be super important

01:23

for chemistry, physics, astronomy, and optics.

01:26

Fraunhofer’s discovery was,  and remains, a pretty big deal.

01:29

He was the first to document  these spectral absorption lines,

01:31

caused by atoms absorbing  specific amounts of energy

01:34

from light that’s passing through.

01:36

Because when you’re dealing with light,  energy corresponds to wavelength…

01:39

that is, color.

01:40

Then the 1860s, some other German scientists…

01:43

including Robert Wilhelm  Bunsen of “bunsen burner” fame…

01:46

found that absorption lines  had not-at-all-evil twins

01:49

called spectral emission lines

01:50

that show up when you split up  the light coming from an element

01:53

when it’s burning.

01:54

Both emission and absorption lines

01:56

are the result of an atom’s electrons  jumping between energy levels.

02:00

When it’s emission, the electron  is emitting that energy,

02:02

so it’s dropping down some number of levels.

02:05

When it’s absorption, it’s the opposite.

02:06

The exact amount of energy,

02:08

and therefore the exact color of the light,

02:10

depends on several factors, including  how many electrons are involved,

02:13

and which levels they’re jumping between.

02:14

Both of these lines act  like chemical fingerprints,

02:17

because each atom has a unique  set of lines that they produce.

02:20

So element hunters started using spectroscopes

02:22

to split light from all sorts of places

02:24

to find unique new fingerprints,  and therefore elements.

02:27

Remember that this is right around when Mendeleev

02:30

is coming up with his periodic table.

02:31

He’s arranged the known elements  according to atomic weight,

02:34

but he realised that there are  repeating patterns of properties.

02:36

When he mapped it all out,

02:37

there were actually gaps where  unknown elements might be.

전체 자막은 비디오 플레이어에서 이용 가능

연습 문제로 학습하기

이 동영상에서 어휘, 문법, 이해력 연습 문제를 만드세요

어휘 및 문법 이해력 퀴즈 IELTS 시험 쓰기 연습
회원가입해서 연습하기
아직 댓글이 없습니다. 첫 번째로 생각을 공유하세요!

가입하고 모든 기능 잠금 해제

진행 상황 추적, 단어 저장, 연습 문제 풀기

무료로 언어 학습