Added: 3 years ago
From: sparkleystitch
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  • are all of this coincedence ?!!! i dont know, really strange

  • how much of the rest of the reel of film (used in the example) do the other waves take up? All of it? or are there other waves we don't know about?

  • @jimaldo64

    The waves we do not know about propagate at Planck lengths, I guess. We can not measure them, perhaps.

  • so is there a limit to wave length

    

  • @Darcy137

    Yes, I guess. Ultimately the top limit would be one Planck length.

  • what is the name of this documentary movie... and where can i watch it?

  • They turn a family members-one against each other-They distracts innocents people 24/7 They buther disturb and distract on a daily bases included nights-Targeted individual can't find solutions because they can't bring this issue to reality bec, they ways they do it it's not seen or can be heard-It's done in a very very snicks evil-ways!

  • how can something vibrate faster than the speed of light?

  • @gespilk Vibration isn't the same as traveling through space/time.

  • @Kostly

    Well, if we define vibration as changing some physical property of reality at a specific point in space then that change could not happen faster than the speed of light. Right?

    so change rate (or frequency) over the speed of light should not be possible?Right?

    Funny.

  • It's not bad

  • Pretty amazing to look outside and to know that you only see less than 1 percent of what's really there.

  • wow thats crazy

  • OMG.....I think I just realized the basis for Terence McKenna's work with the I-Ching. My God.

  • @Kostly

    well, were you right? are you sharing? :-)

  • @jimaldo64 It was so long ago that I had that "aha" moment. Since then, I've moved on to thinking about other things. But, the framework of Timewave Zero, I think, has a foundational aspect provided by several different wavelengths of the electromagnetic spectrum. I'm not entirely recalling what was contained in my "Aha" thought about it, though. Too long ago. But, since I kind of forgot it, I guess I failed in my "aha" moment. LOL

  • is it supposed to be funny?

  • BULL

  • cool he made a light saber

  • I know the wavelength is inversely proportional to the wave frequency, but what about the amplitude?

  • Within the light of our minds exist all such things. They used to tell u in stone, this time in toilet paper.

  • One must ask oneself the question, "Can the power of illusion not beat the power of the 'conventional' weapon? The visible band is the one they will take the greatest advantage of, in the end.

  • i might sound stupid but does other animals see different parts of the electromagnetic spectrum making their sight different to ours

  • @Psalm789 Damn right, man. Ever heard of BATS? lol!

    But seriously, it's a HUMAN thing. Like we got time to worrry bout the lizards. lol!

  • @Psalm789, yes some animals do se other parts of the spectrum. Many insects and birds see ultraviolet part of the spectrum, and snakes can sense the infrared part of the electromagnetic spectrum. Some animals like the mantis shrimp have sort of a hyperspectral vision, so they see infrared, ultraviolet and also the part a human eye can see.

    We lose a lot of information, our senses make only coarse images of the reality. "Whole" is actually less than the parts it consists of..

  • @korteksi them what would happen if we can see the whole spectrum?

  • @Psalm789 that would mean you are the Lord =]

  • @CaninAble excuse me if i misunderstood your comment, as english is not my native language. but if i did get it right;

    whats at play? thats a bigger question and irrelevant i believe. also i didnt just mean on paper. i ment as in visible light. like a photographers work, or a film director's. light, from a human perspective, means vision you know. bees see in a different spectrum and we can never see what they see. thats what i ment.

  • I can't believe I walked out of high school not knowing this.

  • it had blown my mind when i had first learned about this in a study of light class in collage. kinda makes you wonder what we are missing.

    well maybeenot missing as we have ways of detecting what we cant see but from an artists point of view i do wonder what it d look like..

  • @typo6t "what we are missing."? Or what is already at play?

    Are we not incorporated on more levels than paper?

  • Why is that magnetic radiation isn't part of the visible spectrum?

  • @Juefawn because your eye cant see it

  • @saligari666 so your saying a sense receptor can't pick up a reality?

  • @Juefawn yes why do find it wierd?

  • @saligari666 yes I do think its weird, not only that, it makes me think. Maybe there are things we can't observe because we haven't evolved some physical sense to it.

  • @Juefawn no animal has,you evolve out of need,you see colors-in order to see what plant is posiones and what isent,meat eating animals dont see colors...there are many reayties our sense cant catch,there are sounds that cats and dogs can hear and we cant,we cant also see bacteria or partecles for that matter

  • If you would like to see a paper showing how to get the radii and intensity of spectral emissions using a purely classical formula that doesn't involve Planck's constant Please check

    alienscientist. com/theory. pdf

    All the math equations are provided, we even show how to derive the Schrodinger Equation from this formalism as well as Special Relativity. Please email me through my website if you have any feedback. Thanks!

  • Simple and powerful explanation. Great Video!

  • there is so much we are not available to as humans with our pathetic senses.

  • @circusboy90210 Our eye's would be useless if we could see the rest of the spectrum. We only see visible light because thats the most efficient way to know our immediate surroundings. Most other wavelengths pass straight through walls and other solid objects. If we could see these wavelengths with our eyes then we would see right through walls. Imagine navigating through a building without being able to see the walls.

  • @akrivera if we could see both then both could we see both the wall & what's behind it?

  • @circusboy90210 It's possible. However thats not as useful as it sounds. If the light can pass through the wall right in front of you, then it will pass through all the solid objects behind it as well. Light such as this would be useless in detecting objects we can interact with. I imagine you would just be blinded by many many distant points of light.

  • God is great

  • Great video!

    insurancematter.co.uk

  • What about wavelengths we cannot measure beyond Gamma?

  • @bicnarok there r no rays beyond gamma rays which have more wavelength than gamma rays and have more energy

  • this means that there are lots of other types of radiations, that, if perceived by the human eye, would generate billions of different colors, that most people don't even know of.Right?

  • wonderful ! thanks for sharing !!

  • wonderful !!!thank you

  • awesome.

  • the comprehension of how limited the visible spectrum is should make one skeptical of skepticism itself.

  • huh...

  • In radio waves you have fields and the energy of these fields is not frequency dependant. Light is described by photons and the energy of photons is frequency dependant. Btw. the two descriptions is the infra red digergence where your photons either have effective mass, light, or they don't, radio waves. Trying hard with soft photons, similar to soft logic, the disjoint is said to be curable.

  • LOL @ Prolific85 - Sure glad they DON'T see the other 99%!

    We'd be blind!

    Imagine walking into a room with a lamp and being able to find your way around just find - Then imagine the room BEING THE LAMP'S BULB itself - Now try finding your way around. The Unseen light IS actually seen through various means by the body/eyes, and due to its nature we are unable to see if for SAFETY'S SAKE - Good Grief.

    Let's talk science all the way if you're going to discant iamsnail's view.

  • is radio waves are only used in panchromatic satellites???????

  • It is obvious from this video that our eyes were intelligently designed. /sarc

  • @Prolific85

    What are you trying to proov? That potential does not existed before the actualitation? Think about it. And u will be able to understand why God is called Wise.

  • @iamsnail I was being sarcastic. If anything, our eyes were horribly designed if we can't detect 99% of the spectrum.

  • No it does not. It means there is limits. This way u get enough pleasure and usefull information about universe. And still you can undnerstand otherthings whitout those things disturbing u.

    U cant say something is horriblly designed if there is limitations. Only that way anything can be designed. Whitout limits, there would be nothing for u to observe.

  • Creator of the Spectrum is marvelous in His creation. You cant deny that. And call it horribly designed. Its all beauty. SAme God created the Vies who created the wiever.

  • Or do it better Yourself... And learn us How universe is to be created that Your Wisdom will be learned. so that we would know what Wisdom and Power really is.

  • Comment removed

  • How do we know that gamma and radio waves are the two polar extremes? Maybe they're just the limit of our detection abilities?

  • Why the lamp has this broad sections and the and? What is it?

  • How arrogant...humans can see wavelengths from 375 to 750 nanometers and call that tiny range the "visible" spectrum...and the rest isn't even invisible to a great many other species...

  • This is why we won't see what hits us....

  • Min 00:20 "Visible light is a tiny fraction of the whole electromagnetic spectrum. A reel of film representing the entire spectrum stretches 2500 mi. The visible spectrum is 1 frame in 2000 mi of tape-it's what we see."

    High electromagnetic frequencies appear black to us. Space is black. Spots on our Sun are black. "Black" is not cold or not "nothing" but very something. The black of space & space around us is full of frequencies which we're unable to detect. Amazing stuff! (see Astrotometry)

  • You talking about black people?!?!

  • silius, 29 and no date on a Friday night? Come now!

    Get some night vision viewers and come on over! We'll sit and watch the show in the stars tonight...hehehehe

  • The visually light spectrum actually contains about 60 percent of the energy output from the sun. The energy is greatest at green wavelengths. Most of the rest of the energy is in the infrared and about 10 percent in the UV band. Negligible energy above that.

  • Can someone spell me that name in 1:47 - 1:49

    defraction what?

  • Diffraction grating

    (From Wikipedia)

    In optics, a diffraction grating is an optical component with a regular pattern, which splits and diffracts light into several beams travelling in different directions. The directions of these beams depend on the spacing of the grating and the wavelength of the light so that the grating acts as the dispersive element.

    A photographic slide with a fine pattern of black lines forms a simple grating.

  • @sparkleystitch i think the plastic looking diffraction grating he used in the video is basically the same thing as dvd or cd. there are youtube videos showing how to make your own spectrometer with a cd and cereal box.

  • @BlueFENIX2012 Dude, Your Retarded.

  • @joshuagamboa101 ,what I did to offend you?

  • @BlueFENIX2012 Nothing LOLOLOLOLLOLOLOLOLLOol

  • @BlueFENIX2012 defraction grading?

  • @BlueFENIX2012  something like ''greatly'' maybe

  • I never knew the light spectrum was such a tiny part of the whole spectrum. I knew it was small, but not that small!!!!!!! Wow!

  • this video is cool. i think im going to start using youtube as apart of my visuals for my astronomy class. thanks so much for posting this sort of information

  • Our eyes barely see!

  • I have always wondered about this. Why do we only see if this small part of the spectrum? Sure it would be an advantage to see in other parts of the spectrum? For example the infrared like the Predator, or X-ray? It'd be quite hard to a predator to hide from you then.

  • I like the way Americans exaggerate everything! This was very helpful!

  • I like the way non-Americans always feel the necessity to identify themselves.

    Way to show us how stereotypically minded you are.

  • I like the way some people get the wrong end of the stick.

  • agreed +10000000

  • @Sectorsophia fuck teyeah

  • does any1 kno the name of the huge underground facility in europe where there bending light with electromagnetics to break down the atom? it's like a big huge halo underground. i saw it on tv and i forget wut it calld

  • isnt that CERN

  • hadron collider?

  • I have a class in that building.

  • awesome...its really a gud one...

  • thanx

  • i have to write a 500+ word essay on this due nov 4 =[ sigh thanks 4 helping me =]

  • You are very welcome... Hope you did well on your essay.

  • @kaitlyn11495

    lol what is that a paragraph

  • Great video which I've featured on my website EnglishNowTV dot kom.

  • Spectroscopy, awesome :-]]

  • One of the best explanationI have seen.Great for the classroom.Thanks for helping me be a better teacher

  • This is so intersting Thanks :)

  • wow that was sweet

  • very interesting vid..thanks for posting!

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