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  • Oh, hello.

  • Welcome to Michael's Toys the first and only show on YouTube made by, of, and for teenagers who like to cook

  • I'm your host Michael Stevens and today

  • We are going to be talking about magnets, specifically the strongest magnetic field my body has ever been inside

  • The 3 tesla MRI at UC Irvine

  • Which I guess kind of makes this an episode of UC Irvine's toys because they own the MRI, I don't.

  • Anywho, I had a lot of MRI scans done of

  • My brain for MindField season two and I learned a lot about them, and they are... just beautiful and wonderful.

  • Here's a question how strong are different magnets?

  • Well, one way of measuring a magnet's magnetic field strength, really its magnetic flux density, is the tesla.

  • Alright now to put a tesla into perspective, our planet is a big magnet, really.

  • It's not a really strong magnet thoughits magnetic field strength is just about maybe 31 microteslas.

  • In comparison and everyday ordinary refrigerator magnet has a magnetic flux density of about maybe like five milliteslas.

  • A typical sunspot can have a magnetic flux density of around a third of a tesla, but the surface of a neodymium

  • rare-earth magnet can have a magnetic flux density around 1.25 tesla.

  • The MRI machine I got in many many times for MindField season 2 was a 3 tesla machine

  • Which means you can do some pretty weird things with it. You have to be very very careful:

  • No ferromagnetic metals are allowed into the room it is in, or even near it in the room outside because it attracts

  • ferromagnetic materials so quickly that they could be pulled from your hand race through the air at an ever-accelerating rate

  • until they strike the machine at, like, super-lethal and at least very dangerous speeds.

  • There are videos on YouTube where people show off just how dangerous the

  • magnetic power of an MRI can be: it can lift chairs off the ground, but what about metals that aren't attracted to magnets?

  • Well, they exhibit some v ery strange behaviors and Craig Stark at UC Irvine

  • was kind enough to allow me to bring in a giant block of aluminum

  • (chuckles wickedly)

  • Now I'm gonna have to just talk over this clip because we obviously couldn't bring cameras or microphones

  • into the room to pick up our voices we had to set the camera far away and then zoom into myself pause

  • Let's just take a brief moment to appreciate the tan line on my face caused by my glasses

  • But here's an aluminum block and I'm gonna set it up on its side, and then let it fall okay, pretty easy

  • That's a great demonstration of gravity

  • But watch what happens when I set the aluminum block near the inside of the MRI and let it go

  • Anti-gravity

  • But not really. It's actually a demonstration of Lenz's law

  • Veritasium has a fantastic video on the topic and I see it coming up on Reddit

  • Quite frequently so I had to do it myself, it's really fun these are very powerful magnets

  • And I'm gonna drop them so that they fall

  • Only due to gravity. Here we go: three, two, one

  • there it is 9.8 m/s^2, for those of you counting at home, but now I'm gonna drop them through a copper pipe.

  • Copper has no interest in magnets, or maybe magnets don't care about them

  • Or do they? Well we're gonna find out. Notice that if I try to stick the magnets magnets to the copper, it not

  • Doesn't work, but if I drop them through

  • watch what happens. Three two one

  • They fall really slowly. Here we go one more time three two one

  • Something's slowing them down. You can hear that they are hitting the sides of the copper

  • But they don't have to do that if my magnet was a better shape it wouldn't happen, and they would just glide right on down

  • They really are more slowly. Let's look at it from above.

  • Here are the magnets being dropped by themselves.

  • That's how long it takes for them to fall to the table

  • three two one

  • That's it

  • But now let's drop them through this copper pipe. Okay ready three two one

  • Look at that! Let's try it one more time.

  • Three, two one, and they hit. Much much slower.

  • To see what's going on, let's play around with magnets. One of my favorite magnetic fun recipes is a one that I learned from Science Bob

  • Fantastic guy.

  • It involves breakfast cereals and a bowl of water.

  • So here's my bowl of water now what I need to do is grab myself one little flake of this corn flake-like cereal

  • Now many breakfast cereals are fortified with iron

  • And it's not iron in any kind of compound. It's literally just elemental iron.

  • If I float a little piece of cereal there in the water looks pretty boring

  • But now let's bring a magnet near it.

  • Ohhhh! Look at that! It follows the magnet! I'll come in from the other side so you can see that

  • it wasn't just some sort of property of the water

  • C'mon, little cereal flakey. Yeah.

  • Look at that! I'm able to move the cereal across the water by attracting the iron inside it with a magnet.

  • When you eat many foods you're eating just straight-up elemental iron like the kind

  • We make nails out of just like a lot less than would be in a nail. Oh I love that

  • I hope it's clear for you guys to see this demo wasn't really related to MRIs

  • I just thought it would be really fun to do to really start talking about why that block of aluminium fell

  • So slowly around that strong magnetic field we need a more advanced recipe

  • but I think you guys are ready for it what we're gonna need for this recipe is a

  • really

  • nice

  • big

  • nail

  • You're also going to need... let's see this one looks good

  • Oh, perfect, yeah.

  • You're gonna need some copper wire that's thinly insulated.

  • You might need more than this, but what you're gonna want to do is take your wire and coil it around your nail.

  • Make the coil nice and tight

  • Keep them all bunched together, so you get as many wrap arounds of the wire around the nail as you can get and then

  • When you're done

  • You'll want to connect the two ends of the wire to a battery now

  • That might take a while so because of the magic of a TV cooking show I prepared an electromagnet earlier

  • Oh yeah it's ready, this is good this is really good.

  • Okay...now...

  • Perfect. Ohh yeah.

  • Hey...!

  • Just like mom used to make. Um, we've got here a big battery,

  • and we've got a nail that is just coiled with lots and lots of wire. I think that

  • We let the paperclip simmer long enough. I'm gonna go ahead and put them

  • There on our aluminum foil and I'll demonstrate that at this moment

  • Because the wires are not completing a circuit the nail

  • Is not magnetic, has no effect on the paper clips

  • But now let's connect this wire to the negative terminal and see what happens

  • Ooh, OK, we're live, and...

  • Yeah!

  • Now let's turn off the current.

  • Oh! Hoohoohoo!

  • All right, so what we've learned is that current flowing creates a magnetic field.

  • What's even more fascinating is that a moving magnetic field can

  • also generate electric current there are fantastic videos online showing you how to do this.

  • By simply spinning a magnet around a coil of wire. You can light a light up

  • This is how electric generators work. All you need is something to keep the magnet spinning, like wind or falling water, and

  • Your coil will supply electric current

  • There's a very interesting loop going on here: electric current produces a magnetic field

  • but a moving magnetic field can produce electric current

  • Now, this is key to why the block of aluminum falls so slowly near a strong magnet.

  • It's also why even things like living frogs can be levitated if your magnet is strong enough

  • Not all materials are attracted to magnets this nail is made of iron and

  • Well the magnet loves it a whole lot but this copper tube...

  • Nothing. The magnet just doesn't care at all.

  • But what copper *can* do is conduct electricity

  • and since a moving magnetic field can induce electric current in a conductor

  • If we put these together and move one of them well then we should be able to produce some current

  • But we also know that electric current creates a magnetic field

  • Which means we could make the copper act like a magnet by inducing current in it.

  • Let's try that using this conveniently positioned ribbon I'm gonna take these

  • Neodymium disk magnets and very carefully slide them apart

  • It's very important to be safe with magnets

  • They are attracted to each other so much more strongly the closer they get

  • that they can easily pinch you, so please be careful with strong magnets.

  • Okay, here we go... Perfect.

  • If I bring this nail near the hanging magnets, ooh they love it. They love it.

  • But the copper they don't really care much for.

  • Not much interest. Hello? Wake up! No, they don't care.

  • Watch what happens if I move this copper pipe quickly near the magnets,

  • oooh

  • Look at that! Now they're not touching at all, but I'm able to get the magnets moving because

  • As I move the pipe across the magnets- look at that! well

  • This is really fun- as I move the pipe

  • across the magnets the magnetic flux density at each point along this piece of copper changes that creates

  • an electric current and that electric current, by Lenz's law, will produce a magnetic field

  • That is opposed to the magnetic field of these magnets causing the hanging magnets to move.

  • Now the faster you move the materials, the more dramatic the effects.

  • Oh, yeah!

  • Beautiful!

  • This is why the magnets fall through this copper tube so

  • slowly

  • By Lenz's law the magnetic field they induce in the copper pipe is

  • counter to their own magnetic fields you can think about this phenomenon in terms of conservation of energy

  • Where does the energy come from that produces the electric current in the pipe and the magnetic field? Well it comes from the falling magnets.

  • They fall more slowly because some of that energy is being converted into electric current.

  • The currents created by a moving magnetic field are called eddy currents, and if you want to become more eddy-cated about them,

  • there are links down below where you can learn more.

  • Now let me address a quick question

  • You might be having why is a video like this on the DONG channel and not on Vsauce1?

  • Well I answered this question on Reddit yesterday and

  • The long and the short of it is that in my opinion both channels have sort of different goals. My goal on Vsauce1 is

  • to upload videos where I get to share the things and the new framings that caused a concept to finally click in my head

  • Concepts that I never thought I'd be able to wrap my head around before

  • Now doing that can take a long time

  • I've been working for a while on an episode about rotational phenomenon specifically some counterintuitive ones

  • And I'm not happy on Vsauce 1 just using vocab words like torque and moment of inertia to describe what's going on

  • I want to define what those words mean and ask why

  • over and over again so far back that we're left with nothing but

  • Geometric principles and symmetries of the universe that can take a while, so thank you for your patience

  • I hope that you you share my passion for the topic when the episode comes out and think that it's worth it

  • But on the DONG

  • channel, I'm able to share things really quickly without disappointing people who expect something deeper in fact in this year

  • So far in just 2018. I've already made now 10 episodes on DONG

  • That's more than I made on Vsauce 1 all of last year so I love DONG

  • But I remain steadfastly committed to

  • Both

  • Channels

  • Now DONG is made possible, especially today, by our sponsor

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  • You guys out there watching Michael's Toys today a free audiobook download with a 30 day trial membership

  • What's great about Audible is that, when you download an audiobook, it's yours to keep, like, forever.

  • Okay? If you end your membership, you still own the book. It's fantastic.

  • Um, I would highly recommend the audiobook of Carl Sagan's Cosmos

  • The voices narrating it are just unbeatable. One of the narrators is Ann Druyan.

  • She was the creative director of NASA's golden records project that put the golden records on Voyager 1 & 2 a

  • Recording of her brain waves are on that record that someday other life-forms out there might find

  • Uh, she, while she had her brain waves recorded. She was thinking about

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  • Awesome stuff, thank you Audible. Remember, audible.com/michaelstoys

  • And, as always, thanks for watching.

  • That MRI at UC Irvine by the way is a giant electromagnet, but it doesn't take a huge amount of power to run because

  • It's really cool

  • Cold, like, really cold.

  • It's cooled by liquid helium near absolute zero so it becomes a superconductor

  • And there's almost no resistance

  • You literally throw some charge in there, some current starts going through, and it gets so cold that it becomes a persistent charge.

  • And it just remains an electromagnet unlike my nail which is not a superconductor and well when the currents turned off it

  • stops being a magnet

  • In fact, if you want to turn off the magnet in their MRI, you have to quench the MRI

  • There's this big emergency button you can push if some emergency happens

  • And the liquid helium is shot out of a big vent, probably on the roof of the hospital building; it's this big plume of

  • Helium gas and condensed liquid water from the air because it's just so cold and it's well

  • It's very dramatic

  • There're videos on YouTube where you can see MRIs being quenched

  • That will cause resistance to come back into the coil and it will cease to be an electromagnet.

  • But I love the fact that they just kinda plug it in once,

  • Power up that electromagnet, end then after that is the energy to keep the helium cool.

Oh, hello.

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