StarTalk Radio - Extended Classic: MythBusters (Part 2)

Episode Date: December 13, 2014

Since they didn’t blow up Neil’s office in Part 1, the MythBusters Adam Savage and Jamie Hyneman are back to finish the job. Now extended with 10 minutes of Cosmic Queries with Neil and Chuck! Sub...scribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ on Apple Podcasts to listen to new episodes ad-free and a whole week early.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to StarTalk, your place in the universe where science and pop culture collide. StarTalk begins right now. This is StarTalk Radio. I'm your host, Neil deGrasse Tyson. I'm an astrophysicist and the director of New York City's Hayden Planetarium right here in New York City. Today, I've got co-host Chuck Nice. Hey, Neil. Is Chuck Nice nice?
Starting point is 00:00:36 No. Short answer. No. Short answer. All right. But you tweet at Chuck Nice Comic. That's correct. Thanks for doing this.
Starting point is 00:00:44 It's always my pleasure. Love having you on. We're at part two of the That's correct. Thanks for doing this. It's always my pleasure. We love having you on. We're at part two of the StarTalk Mythbusters interview. Yeah. The Mythbusters. You got to love you some Mythbusters. Yeah, man. What a great show.
Starting point is 00:00:53 Been on Discovery Channel for 10 years, and the Mythbusters are Adam Savage and Jamie Heineman. If you don't know who was who, Jamie Heineman, he's bald with a hat. Okay. You got that? He's the one that looks like a walrus. I did not tell him that to his face. Do you think of Chumlee or something?
Starting point is 00:01:08 Chumlee, that's what you remember? Okay, I remember Chumlee. Come along, Chumlee. If you're 50 or older, you'll know who Chumlee is. It's been one of the most popular shows on all of the Discovery Channel stable of programming. And as you may know, they use elements of the scientific method to test the validity of like myths and rumors and urban legends and stuff they show in movies and all these crazy internet YouTube videos of people doing weird stunts. Did they fake it or is it real?
Starting point is 00:01:36 Super cool show. Yeah. And so they visited me in my office in New York City and I whipped out the microphone and we just chilled for an hour. Sounds good. Yeah. So one thing I couldn't help but talk about was, did Archimedes really set fire to the invading ships using mirrors? Let's find out.
Starting point is 00:01:55 Mirrors can start fires. You can focus enough of the sun's rays on a point to burn and melt all sorts of very, very high melting point things. The question is, can you use it as a military weapon against an actual boat? Yeah, from quite a distance and using a number of different mirrors that are handheld. And the devil's in the details in this particular case because it's dramatically different to be right next to something with a perfectly focused small mirror
Starting point is 00:02:21 and potentially hundreds of feet away with these things moving around. You need that Pinpoint to be able to come into focus You can't just light up the broad side of the shit light up your outside and we found even with this view as ten people Getting all ten of them to aim a mirror To ten feet away to the same spot is actually just that is really difficult and the farther way It is the tiniest movement of your hand sways it. And what's your aiming reticule? How do you know where your mirror beam is hitting when it's off? Your aiming reticule.
Starting point is 00:02:49 Oh, my goodness. Not to mention the movement of the boat, which it would be moving. The rocking of the boat and water sloshing up. You've got to evaporate the water before you evaporate. Well, this was about a boat that was in the process of attacking the shore. And so it's going to be underway. So you've got to be able to track it. And the sun's moving as well there's just no practical reasonable way that you'd be able to
Starting point is 00:03:09 get a pinpoint thing if i remember the guys at mit they like painted the side of the boat matte black or they did and they used mirrors on stationary stands this is dr david wallace at mit and he was a big fan of mythbusters he used used it as... Until then. No, no, no. So we had done it once and busted it, and then he brought his students out at our invitation, and we set up 500 mirrors, just like his experiment, but this time we were aiming it at a boat, and we couldn't get it to go. And the only thing we hadn't done in that story was get 500 actual soldiers, quote unquote, on the shore with mirrors trying to actively point. And that's when the Obama administration called and asked if we could somehow work with them on a myth that would
Starting point is 00:03:52 help promote the STEM initiative. And we suggested this one as a perfect one because our soldiers could be high school students. And Jamie's wife is a science teacher. Wait, so you now have legions of high school students trying to ignite things with reflected mirrors. Absolutely. Absolutely. Large ones that we supply. Large focusing mirrors. And their interest level was high.
Starting point is 00:04:15 It was excellent. They were a terrific army. So this all started because there was a legend that Archimedes, we know, love me some Archimedes. Right. Give me some more Archimedes, right? That he destroyed enemy ships with fire caused by these reflective mirrors. And they were called burning glasses. Burning glasses.
Starting point is 00:04:35 Burning glasses. Second century, AD second century author Lucian wrote that during the seas of Syracuse, 214 to 212 BC, Archimedes destroyed the enemy ships this way. Okay. And the cool thing about it is if you're at war, it's good to have smart people on your side. That's so true. You know, you knew you could focus light. The light would make something hotter. Right.
Starting point is 00:05:01 And so this has been sort of a legend and people never really knew if they could pull this off. Okay. And the Mythbusters, you know, went ahead and tried it. It turns out you can do it if the side of the ship is painted matte black. Matte black. Matte black. Right.
Starting point is 00:05:15 And it's parked there. All right? Okay. And everybody's there aiming. And at the exact same spot. Exact spot. But if you're at a ship that's swaying in the ocean and it's wet. Wet. Number one. You can't ignite something that's wet. Right. That spot. But if you're in a ship that's swaying in the ocean and it's wet.
Starting point is 00:05:25 Wet, number one. You can't ignite something that's wet. Right. That's why, did you know, that's why you can boil water in a paper cup. Have you ever tried that? The paper cup is wet. Yes, it's wet because it has water in it. That's how that works.
Starting point is 00:05:40 See how I got right in on that one? The cup cannot get hotter than 212 degrees. Right. And it has to be hotter than 212 degrees. Right. And it has to be hotter than 212 degrees to burn. So this kept going. We also wanted, can you prove a negative? Mm-hmm. Right?
Starting point is 00:05:52 Like, how about Loch Ness? Well, that's a loch, but Nessie. Nessie. Is it there? Can you show that it's not? Let's find out. Most urban legends are about the existence of something or a claim of something that is true. How about claims of something that are not true?
Starting point is 00:06:09 Oh, like that. Then you have to prove a negative. Chupacabra. Yeah, yeah. Loch Ness Monster. Exactly. The Jackalope. The Jackalope, yes.
Starting point is 00:06:17 I saw a cartoon with a Jackalope in it, so I'm pretty sure it's real. A moderate politician. So how do you deal with having to prove negatives other than the logical impossibility i mean there's a practical element that one should ought to be able to demonstrate the unlikelihood of something well if you're doing something like looking for a ghost or whatever where you can't use a control to compare against, all you're going to be able to do is prove that you weren't able to find that. As evidenced by all the ghost hunting shows that never find a ghost and all the Bigfoot shows that never find Bigfoot.
Starting point is 00:06:53 Yeah, it's not proof that they don't exist. It's just proof that you couldn't find it. And that's one of the things where science in its methodology has a way of dealing with actually being able to test things and that's providing controls and things that you can compare against and so we just stay away from those things we can't physically test it and come up with any kind of conclusion other than it don't happen on your watch it didn't happen on our watch which is not proper science right there's a famous philosopher bertrand russell yeah he hypothesized the teapot experiment.
Starting point is 00:07:26 You say there's a teapot orbiting the sun. Okay. I know there is. How? Well, so now you have to prove that there isn't. You gotta prove that there's not a teapot. Right, and then I just go back to the Bahamas while you're up there trying to prove. Trying to figure it out.
Starting point is 00:07:38 Right? So he's trying to distinguish people making claims that the burden of proof should not be on the person who doubts you. It should be on the person who's making the claim. Gotcha. Gotcha. And so it'd be really cool if astronauts went up and actually found a teapot. Nothing would make me happier.
Starting point is 00:07:54 Well, when we come back, more of StarTalk. Tyson here. Chuck Nice there. That was very Starship Captain. It was. It was. That was. Warp factor five already.
Starting point is 00:08:21 We got the Mythbusters. They came to visit me in New York and they didn't come to visit me. They were in New York and I snared their schedule. Nice. Them come by my office. You know, there's some myths that Discovery Channel will not let them test. Really? Yeah. Danger? Let's find out. Okay. Well, the one that I've been wanting to do, it actually involves canceling velocities. And it was based on a video where some baseball pitcher hangs his arm out the window with the baseball and he throws it backwards in the opposite direction that the train is traveling at exactly the same speed. And so to somebody on the side, the ball just drops out of midair and stops. We did that, Cary Grant and Tori did that on the
Starting point is 00:09:01 show and I was a little ticked off because I wanted to do that, but I wanted to take it a step further where I would get to be the baseball. You would get thrown off the train. Canceled velocity. So presumably he'd just be standing there. Yeah. No, you'd have to be thrown off the moving train backwards at the speed of the train. Right. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:09:18 I would rig a backwards-facing slingshot. What could possibly go wrong? What could possibly? Well, it actually goes on from there where if you rigged something like this on a bus you know the bus wouldn't even have to stop at the bus stop you just get into this little pod and then bang you're right on the and you're standing you're standing stock still the buses would never have to stop yeah trains would not have to stop planes would never just have continuously running people into it well there's going to be a limit, you know, you're not going to get up to speed
Starting point is 00:09:47 in an airplane that's traveling 500 miles an hour. Because you have to get on the airplane in the first place. Ignoring that complication, this is a brilliant idea. Well, yeah, I mean, the G-loads, if you accelerate from 0 to 500 miles an hour in, what, 50 feet or not 50 feet. Okay, you're a pile of goo, fine, but it's otherwise a brilliant idea. And so they had issues with safety, and I went immediately to one of the tricks that we often do when we're testing things is to get into it incrementally. Obviously, they wouldn't have any safety issues if I did it at five miles an hour, and I could do that running off of a low trailer that's being towed by a truck. Up to your own body speed, yeah. You've got five, ten miles an hour for sure.
Starting point is 00:10:25 So you're easing them into this idea that you're going to have a high speed. Presumably at some point it might be 50 miles an hour. Who knows? The G loads that you would have to subject yourself to over, say, a 50-foot long bus or trailer would be excessive. You have to accelerate from zero to that speed very quickly. Yeah. But there would be a safe way if you do it incrementally to increase the speed and find out what you could do.
Starting point is 00:10:49 A theoretically safe way. Yeah, this speaks towards a lot of what we do on the show where some of these things are silly. We've polished turds and we've made balloons out of lead. You know, inherently ridiculous. They're of no major importance. Yeah. They're curiosities. Did you say polished turd?
Starting point is 00:11:05 Yeah, we actually got a reflectometer to make sure we were genuinely making it shiny. And Jamie did lion poo, I did ostrich poo. Yeah, I got mine within a couple of percent similar to ball bearings shininess. It was pretty impressive. This is hardened poo, obviously. Do you know the process of dorodongo, the Japanese process of making shiny mud balls? No. It's actually really cool.
Starting point is 00:11:27 You can make a nearly perfect shiny sphere out of mud using this process, and just using mud and your hands. So you just put the poo in for the mud. Yeah, so we went to the zoo and we actually collected about a dozen different kinds of poo. And the zookeeper let you take the poo? Yes. Well, they collected it for us. We have shots of Jamie ferreting through a warthog enclosure.
Starting point is 00:11:48 Yeah, that's true. But I digress. Sorry. I was distracted by shiny poo, but go on. So these things are not in and of themselves that useful to know, but the process of getting there is interesting. And in the case of this canceling velocities thing, I started to think carefully since I was especially meeting so much resistance from the insurance company that, you know, I might be maimed or killed in the process of testing this, that I started to parse out what exactly it was that would be of concern.
Starting point is 00:12:17 And it wasn't the drop to the ground, because this affair could be arranged to be fairly low on a low trailer, you know, so maybe you drop a foot or something like that, no big deal. The problem, therefore, is if you would happen to mismatch those velocities, you make a mistake and it doesn't work exactly as planned. And what happens there? Well, you interact with the ground at something other than zero velocity. And what's the problem with that? Well, it's friction. And so if you have friction,
Starting point is 00:12:48 if the velocity is significant enough, then you're going to start to interact with that ground and tumble. And tumbling means broken bones and things like that. And that's where you run into problems. So your euphemism for breaking your neck is interacting with the ground. Yes.
Starting point is 00:13:02 Under parameters that are unacceptable. Yeah. And my solution to that would be to remove the friction, which can be either lubrication, which would be funny and make for good television, I think. You're on the bus and you step into this little slingshot affair and it sprays you with some kind of lubricant. Animal birthing lubricant. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:13:19 So you're on time, even if you're a little greasy. Yeah. Animal birthing lubricant. Actually buy ours in a powder form. Yeah, in large quantities. Just add water. And that's interesting, and it actually feeds right back to conventional things that we all know about, like what do motorcycle racers wear?
Starting point is 00:13:35 They wear leather gear. It's not an exoskeleton. It's an exoskin. Yeah. It allows them to slide. It removes the friction. Maybe they'd be better if they were coated in lubricant. It's possible, as long as there aren't any obstacles on the course. And in our testing,
Starting point is 00:13:48 we could make sure, you know, we go out on a runway so there's nothing that we would hit. But the process of getting there where I come up with this premise, what if we did this, what would happen? It's a what-if situation. And I start to think very carefully about what is the actual problem? And you could, as far as I'm concerned, quite safely manage to jump out of a car going at full speed if you were on something like a shallow ski kind of affair that would just slide. There's no impact that's going to be happening as long as you are doing this in a controlled situation, which we would. Crazy people. They are insane.
Starting point is 00:14:24 However, I was impressed with the fact that you used the term exoskin. Oh. Because as a person who rides motorcycles. I didn't know you were a biker. Well, no longer because I got kids now. My wife won't allow me to do it. Right. She doesn't want you to die.
Starting point is 00:14:36 Right. Yeah. Which, you know, the moment she says, here's a bike, I know our marriage is over. But. The best organ donors are motorcyclists. That's right. Yeah. However, there is a saying that we have in the biking community, better the cow's skin
Starting point is 00:14:49 than my own. And that's for guys who wear leather when they bike. It's not a fashion statement. It's actually for your own safety. So what do they have against cows? Sorry. So this experiment with falling off the truck, they actually did something similar to that, but not with Jamie.
Starting point is 00:15:05 That's the point. So they used a soccer ball and they launched it off the back of a 60 mile an hour truck. And they launched it at 60 miles an hour and the ball just fell straight down. Yeah. But Galileo could have known this. I mean, this was. So it's just fun watching them make this happen. Right.
Starting point is 00:15:20 But it was going to happen that way. Galileo figured that out. Figured it out. A pretty long time ago. A pretty long time ago. A pretty long time ago. Also, there are issues with whether advertisers will get in the way between whether they have an idea that they should perform or not. Now we're talking TV.
Starting point is 00:15:35 Now we're talking TV. Let's find out. So early on, we thought, well, what about teeth whiteners? How well do over-the-counter teeth whiteners work as opposed to the medical grade? So now you're testing brands on that level. And we thought, oh, this is no end of stuff we could test here. And Discovery was, oh, no, no, no. We have advertisers who sell toothpaste.
Starting point is 00:15:53 And I don't begrudge them their business model. I understand that. But really, it shouldn't be your job to tell people what product to buy. Really. It shouldn't. I'm a little sad about it because I love the British version of Top Gear because I love it when they get behind the wheel of a car they don't like and they say, this is a piece of crap.
Starting point is 00:16:10 That is something you will almost never hear on American television. Because we're all about the money. But the fact is you wouldn't have a show unless some sponsor sponsored it. Exactly. So let's be grown up about it and understand that and find some other topic. I guess one of the early times I talked about this was at a hacker conference and they were expecting some sort of like, yeah, screw the man. And I said,
Starting point is 00:16:27 look, that's their business model. And it's one that's allowed me to do all sorts of wonderful stuff that you've enjoyed watching. So let's not begrudge them their own model. But it does mean, you know, that we won't test something that we've always wanted to test, which was the cleanliness of bottled water versus tap water. I'm a New Yorker all the way. And I go to other cities. What the hell are you guys drinking? What's like, ew, what is that? Well, San Francisco, ours is almost as good as New York tap water. So why don't you do, you know, cities would let you contest cities. Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:16:53 Oh, you're totally right. Why don't you do that? We should totally do that. And then the city pride. You know, New York City's tap water is so good because of how thriving the estuary of the Hudson River Valley is. And in San Francisco, we've got a pretty good one. Okay. You're a New Yorker by heritage.
Starting point is 00:17:06 And I'm not. But New York water, I tell you, even I know that. Oh, it's amazing. It's not as good as San Francisco. But San Francisco's water is fine. I'll take you up on that. No, it'd be fun. And then...
Starting point is 00:17:17 We'll do the Pepsi challenge. Yeah, it's a Pepsi challenge. And then what you do is you serve the San Francisco people New York water or vice versa. Right, right, right. Plus you can get Icelandic water. They talk a lot about their water. Local pride. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:17:27 Is it well water? Is it a reservoir water? Is it glacial runoff? Then that way you can stay out of the problem. Absolutely. Okay. I think we've got a whole episode there. Cool.
Starting point is 00:17:37 And we can imply something about bottled water. So do you know there's an annual tap water test? Did not. Conducted by the American Water Works Association. And the best tasting tap water in 2013 was Oklahoma City. Get out of here. Now I think I've been to Oklahoma City and I went to a restaurant
Starting point is 00:17:53 and they're putting like lemon wedges in the water. Exactly. I don't know. Was this test done with lemon wedges in the water? Could that be why Oklahoma City has the best tasting water? Because it's lemonade without sugar? Chuck, got to take a break. When we come back, more of part two of the Mythbusters interview. We're back on StarTalk.
Starting point is 00:18:21 Neil deGrasse Tyson here. Chuck Nice with me. Yes. In studio. Yes. In studio. Yes. In New York. Speaking of New York. What?
Starting point is 00:18:29 You said Oklahoma City won the best tasting water for 2013. I didn't. It was the American Water Works Association, Oklahoma City. But I'm thinking, I thought New York had some awesome water. Yeah. Then I looked at their list. Right. Okay.
Starting point is 00:18:39 So the year before, it was Fremont, Nebraska. Before that, Greenville, South Carolina. Stevens Point, Wisconsin, 2010. Macon, Georgia, 2009. Louisville, Kentucky, 2008. I'm saying, what's going on here? If you have good water, you ought to be winning every year. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:18:53 So what's up with that? What is up with that? Every year a different place has the best water? They say New York has the best pizza because we have the best water going into the dough. That makes the dough better. Yeah, yeah. Okay. Yeah, perhaps.
Starting point is 00:19:03 I think it's just our general awesomeness, I'm just going to say. Awesomosity. Awesomosity. Yeah, so that's part two of our Mythbusters interview with Adam Savage and Jamie Hyman. Jamie Hyman is the bald one with the hat, in case you get him confused. You know, they're famous for their experiments of blowing stuff up. I had to ask him, what happens if you get injured? Let's find out.
Starting point is 00:19:23 Show me your scars. I think I've got about 100 scars on my hands. I've got one on my forehead. What happens if you get injured? Let's find out. Show me your scars. I think I've got about 100 scars on my hands. I've got one on my forehead. I've got about 50, 60 stitches in my hands. I broke my finger about two months ago. Are these from explosions or power tools gone awry? Actually, the most common injury on our set is from moving safety equipment.
Starting point is 00:19:41 Yeah. Those blast panels that we carry around, they weigh close to a couple hundred pounds and, you know, we have to use a bunch of them. So you get your fingers in between them. So yeah, I got my finger in between and broke my left metacarpal. That's happened three times. And those are the most serious. Four times. I was the fourth. Oh, yeah. That's the most trips to the hospital from that type of injury. So have other people been injured, like producers? Other crew members have broken fingers and gotten a couple of stitches here and there, but by and large, that's it. It's all relatively minor outpatient procedures. Any members of your production crew that you want to make sure they get injured?
Starting point is 00:20:17 No, not anymore. So no matter what you say at the beginning of a show, as you blow stuff up, somebody's going to imitate what you're doing. Is there some liability to that as well? We've been very lucky. One thing is we always play out how much our safety procedures are. You know, Discover Channel viewers, they're a notch above others. I think so.
Starting point is 00:20:35 We've been blessed. No one seems to have tried anything super dangerous and gotten hurt doing stuff. Yeah, and we're pretty prominent about don't try this at home and that kind of thing. And when you think about it, I mean, there's so much violent, just out of control, crazy stuff on the television, even in the news that you see all the time. We shouldn't be really held accountable for it. Right. Of all the violence you're exposed to on TV, why turn to you guys? Yeah, you're going to call us the scapegoats. We have had people try stuff we've done in order to save their lives.
Starting point is 00:21:02 And been successful at doing that. We did a couple of episodes on escaping from an underwater car. And one of the things we learned during our episode is that as a car is sinking and it still has air within the car, you actually won't be able to open the door because of the pressure differential until it actually settles on the bottom. So even after the car is full of water, if it's moving through the water, there's still a pressure differential.
Starting point is 00:21:25 And even so, it has to fill with water once it's there. And that's kind of the cool part as far as the drama in us experimenting with this is that you have to wait until it's almost too late. You have to sit there and watch every last bit of the air disappear. And then you open the car door. air disappear and then you open the car door and you will be able to amazingly we had this truck driver in san diego who had a seizure and drove off the end of a pier he came to in the cab of his truck in blackness and realized he was in the water and he thought right okay what did the mythbusters say to do in this case oh you've got to let the cab fill up with water so we opened a vent this is some big cojones on this guy he opened a vent and let his cab fill up with water. So we opened a vent. This is some big cojones on this guy.
Starting point is 00:22:06 He opened a vent and let his cab fill up with water, held his breath and opened the door and swam to safety and emailed us to thank us. Yeah, that's happened about six times across the world. Yeah, a couple of police officers in the Midwest in the winter also went in the drink and credited us with getting them out in time. But so far, thankfully, no kids have improvised explosives. And after 10 years it won't
Starting point is 00:22:29 happen. No and like I said we really big up all of the safety procedures. We're standing in full safety gear. You have eye protection, ear protection, helmets, glass panels. You know the FBI taught us a really great method. If you don't know what's gonna happen with an explosion, put something big between you and it like a building. Yeah. Well and I can tell you also that we've run across things that we could put out there and say don't try this at home and all that kind of stuff but there are episodes that we've canceled because we're not in the business of like this is dangerous now here's how to do it so you know it's not just don't try this at home.
Starting point is 00:23:05 It's don't try this ever at any time, anywhere. Absolutely. Yes. And even about home. And not even about home. Please don't try it at home, especially my home. That's what I'm saying. So this thing about the door is an important fact.
Starting point is 00:23:17 Do you ever notice airplane doors, they seal from the inside out? Right. The door is on the inside and presses against the outside fuselage. That's because when you're flying, the air pressure is higher inside the plane than it is outside. And that air pressure helps to keep the door shut. Nice. Yeah. So that way the locks and other things, you're not fighting what nature is trying to make happen anyway.
Starting point is 00:23:37 Right. And I just re-saw the Bourne trilogy. And in the second one, he drives off the bridge. Right. He knew because Bourne is a smart dude. Yep. And plus you can kick your butt So true
Starting point is 00:23:47 The car goes off The Jeep goes off He waits for it to fill up Then he opens it Then he goes out Right Got that all figured out So I mean here's the thing
Starting point is 00:23:54 Just don't drive your car off Into a body of water How about you just practice Some traffic safety I can tell you As an astronomer We gotta be the safest job In the world
Starting point is 00:24:04 Because the black hole is really far away No chance of getting sucked in Yeah we're good with that Chuck we gotta take a break When we come back More of StarTalk Radio's interview With the Mythbusters What did I just say? Welcome back
Starting point is 00:24:32 StarTalk Radio Tyson here Chuck Nice there That's right Hi Chuck How you doing? I'm doing good You know we're on the internet
Starting point is 00:24:39 StarTalkRadio.net And you can find Archival shows there And there's even a list Of the music that we play. That's very cool. For all the ins and outs of these segments. And they all have to do with whatever we're talking about.
Starting point is 00:24:51 Yeah, whatever the thing is. Which is a very cool way to tie that. I don't even choose the music. We've got top people working on this in our factory. And also, StarTalk has a Twitter handle at StarTalkRadio. So find us there. Check out what's going on. So this is part two of the
Starting point is 00:25:07 Mythbusters interview. Occasionally, sometimes they find things in their work that surprises even me. Let's find out. What is the weirdest urban legend that turned out to be true? Elephants afraid of mice. No, don't say that. We were in South Africa filming with sharks and bad weather kept us off the water. Wait, because everyone for Discovery Channel has to do sharks at some point. Yeah, we've done Shark Week twice. Three times.
Starting point is 00:25:33 This is rites of passage. Oh, yeah. But bad weather kept us off the water, which was a disaster from a production standpoint. So we went in inland and thought, well, let's just produce five minutes of filler. Let's do elephants are afraid of mice. So we found someone afraid of mice.
Starting point is 00:25:46 So we found someone with some mice. We found a nature preserve with some sad elephants. And we set up a procedure. We got a big ball of dung. Elephant turds are like basketballs. And we hollowed out a space in the bottom of the turd. Big enough for a very unhappy mouse. Yeah, one very unhappy mouse in there.
Starting point is 00:26:05 Tied monofilament onto it and went and hid behind a bush. And the people at the game reserve opened the fence. They knew that... The elephants walk on paths that are predictable. Yeah, and we thought this was a fluff piece. The elephant's not going to be able to see what the little mouse or... We thought our biggest problem was going to be, what do we do when the elephant steps on the mouse? Do we film it?
Starting point is 00:26:19 Do we show it? Generally, yeah. It smashes with his Bambi meets Godzilla. Yeah, so the elephant comes out on cue and darned if it didn't come screeching to a stop once the mouse
Starting point is 00:26:29 came out. Yeah. And it very carefully almost tiptoed around. Totally, totally, totally. No. Like Disney style
Starting point is 00:26:38 tiptoeing around a mouse. So then we're thinking well maybe the elephant's never seen its own dung roll by its own accord. Maybe it's afraid of its dung. So we removed the mouse. We had another elephant come's never seen its own dung roll by its own maybe it's afraid of its dog we removed the mouse we had another elephant come through we moved the dung elephant didn't do a darn thing yeah and then we repeated the control that you're trying to put into we posited that that must be a control then we added another mouse and did it with a different
Starting point is 00:26:57 elephant and the same thing got the same so it wasn't just a neurotic not a neurotic elephant we did have and this is another thing that i love we were doing an appearance at a college a few years ago and this eight-year-old girl raised her hand she was like i wanted to know why you used a white mouse in the experiment elephants are afraid of mice because they're not very natural why didn't you use a more natural colored mouse and i said you're absolutely right it's because we weren't thinking far enough ahead we thought we were doing a fluff piece and we just wanted something that was bright on camera.
Starting point is 00:27:28 She was all over that tour. She was totally all over it. More power to her. A future scientist. We failed. Yeah. Unbelievable. First of all, here's two things I'm thinking here.
Starting point is 00:27:39 Yeah. All right. One, elephants have very large brains. Maybe they're not afraid of mice. Maybe they're extremely compassionate. They just didn't want to step on something so small and helpless. Confusing fear for protection. Whoa.
Starting point is 00:27:53 That's number one. Number two, the little girl had a point. Maybe elephants are racist. Okay. Something to consider. They don't like the white mouse. Right. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:28:04 Give me some black mice. Right. You know what black mice, and then I can chill with them. That's like any of a half dozen Disney films where the black animal is the crows. It's the villain, the crows. The crows, wasn't that in Dumbo, actually? That's correct. The crows are the... The crows were the black people. They were.
Starting point is 00:28:20 They're just like, now you know better than that. You know no elephant can't fly. Boy, you better put that feather out your own trunk. Okay, so it's interesting. They didn't test all the controls. They didn't test all the controls. They could have. But this goes way back.
Starting point is 00:28:35 It's not just an urban legend, which is what we say these modern things are. Right. It goes way back. There's a book published in AD 78. That's way back. Pliny the Elder. Okay, I'm not familiar. I don't think they had first and last names back then.
Starting point is 00:28:48 It was like, you don't know Pliny? Right. Pliny the Elder, not Pliny the Baker. Yeah. Right. Get yourself some Pliny. I actually own this book. It's a book called Natural History.
Starting point is 00:28:56 Okay. And I have the first English translation of it, which was from 1600s. Oh, cool. And it is the repository of all knowledge of the day. Oh. All natural knowledge of the day. Oh. All natural knowledge of the day. So it's like the first encyclopedia. It's essentially
Starting point is 00:29:09 the first encyclopedia. And for those younger listeners, it's like Wikipedia, but in print, okay? So. I didn't realize that. You do date yourself when you say encyclopedia.
Starting point is 00:29:19 Yeah, they don't know what the hell you're talking about. Nobody knows what the hell you're talking about. Encyclo-pedia? What does encyclo mean? Where's the wiki? Where's the wiki? Where's the wiki?
Starting point is 00:29:26 So here's the quote. It's a great quote. Of all other living creatures, elephants cannot abide a mouse or a rat. Oh, so even back then. He knew that. Oh, yeah. That's hot. He knew it.
Starting point is 00:29:40 Fascinating. Fascinating. So we don't know why elephants would react that way. And some people have challenged their results, other than the eight-year-old girl, that this is a general result. But it's still fun to know that an elephant can, on some conditions, tiptoe around a monster. When we come back, more of StarTalk Radio's interview with the Mythbusters. We're back for the last segment. Yes, I'm a little crestfallen that this is the last.
Starting point is 00:30:17 Crestfallen? I thought you were from the hood. Every now and then, this whole SAT word comes out of Chuck's mouth. Yes, this is true. This is why I got beat up a lot in the hood. There's your Ivy League education just busting out. You can't hold it in. So the Mythbusters interview with Adam Savage and Jamie Heineman.
Starting point is 00:30:38 This is the last segment. And in this next clip, we hear how they wanted Mythbusters to be different from other science TV shows. And they hypothesize why they think it's become so popular. Check it out. In the end, we really wanted to make sure we weren't just doing like a science demo show. Not that that would be bad. No, no, no, no. But most science programming up until us, where it was practical stuff, is what we'd call demonstration programming. The stuff Bill Nye does.
Starting point is 00:31:02 Here's the concept of this, and here's a model that shows it. Here's a liquid nitrogen. Yeah. The stuff Bill Nye does. Here's the concept of this and here's a model that shows it. Here's a liquid nitrogen and here's the bed of nails. Jamie's got a degree in Russian language and I've got a high school diploma. We have no idea
Starting point is 00:31:13 what the results of any demonstration we're about to do will be. Our ignorance is the audience's ignorance. We're a genuine experimentation show. You said you have
Starting point is 00:31:20 a high school diploma means you don't have a college diploma. That's true. I'm just trying to get the euphemisms right. Well, and that approach points out a fundamental thing to Mythbusters, this thing about experimentation as opposed to demonstration, and the fact that we're not educated formally as scientists. It points out that, you know,
Starting point is 00:31:38 science isn't just for guys in lab coats. We kind of came into this by accident and we were presented with these urban legends to debunk or whatever. We just want to do a good job. So we applied our minds to it and we figured, well, like we do with anything in our normal work, which was special effects before this, we're methodical about it. You know, you have a beginning point, an end point, you have a body of work in the middle, you march through it carefully to make sure that you cover all the bases and you're doing a good job. Well, that just happens to be pretty darn close to science. We never set out to actually illustrate the scientific method. It just turns out that when you're telling a narrative about trying to figure something out...
Starting point is 00:32:19 It comes out that's what it is. That's exactly what it is. That's exactly it. And science is messy and it's a deeply creative process, trying to come up with hypotheses and trying to figure out ways to remove variables and figure out your own bias. One of the strongest points of your show,
Starting point is 00:32:32 at least from my point of view, is you get to see how you think about the problem. Yeah. And how often do you get to see a scientist think about a problem? Never. You just see the result. It's in the journalist's public account of what you did. Exactly. And so we're a participant with you as you do this.
Starting point is 00:32:47 Right, right, right. Well, and you use a word like a hypothesis, and a lot of times people's eyes glaze over it. You don't even have to call it science. Just call it being curious about how to find out how things work. It's posing a question and then methodically going about getting an answer. So that's what we do, and that's one of the reasons the show has had such appeal with people of all ages and all types of backgrounds. See I would have thought it was your beret. I thought that's why people watch the show. The beret is at least 50 percent. It's got to be. The other 50 percent is explosives. That's the recipe. Beret blows stuff up. Equals a decade of TV. So is the beret now surgically attached to your skull?
Starting point is 00:33:26 He's wearing a new one, which I'm one of the few people that can tell immediately. His previous one, we were doing a story about shooting grenades out of the air. Just like a Michael Jackson story where his beret lit up on fire? No, Jamie was throwing grenades for me to shoot at, and he said, I'll give you one chance to shoot my hat, and I hit it. He tossed his hat. He tossed his hat, and I hit it with a shotgun round It has hundreds of holes in it
Starting point is 00:33:48 So that means you're pretty handy with a shotgun We both turned out to be pretty good at trap shooting Well of course shotguns, it's a spray It's a bit of a spray You just have to sort of point it We also tried doing it with just a pistol And it's a whole different world These guys are out of control they are out of
Starting point is 00:34:06 control plus when he first said oh he shot my hat i'm thinking it's it's it's who's the dude with the bow and arrow and the apple exactly william tell william tell right and then yeah what's on your head is the question he shot my hat was it still on your head so i like to think of myth busters is not something that simply debunks or explores urban legends, but it is a demonstration of how science works. Right. That's what it is. And I'm impressed that it has attracted that much interest. That tells me that there's an underbelly out there. There's a hidden geek in us all. In everyone. In everyone. There really is. And the show airs in every region that carries Discovery Channel. So it's Eastern and Central Europe, Denmark.
Starting point is 00:34:46 I got a list here. Finland, South Africa, Norway, Sweden, Australia, Greece, Spain, Brazil. And so it has an appeal. Worldwide. That is extraordinary. And so I'm wondering if this is the beginning and the saga will continue. But I wonder if it's some of the seeds planted that will render science as a mainstream activity. You know, I think in one way it could, but here's what you get most people when you say
Starting point is 00:35:14 science. Yeah. Science is hard. Yeah, I know, but so- Science is hard. But it can be fun. It can be hard and fun. Right.
Starting point is 00:35:21 Right? Yes. Plus, what did John Kennedy say? We go to the moon not because it's easy. Oh, you want to imitate his voice? No, no. But you know how we go to the moon. I just love that.
Starting point is 00:35:32 Do you know more of what he said? Let me see. Because we can. No, that was Obama. Yes, we can. Oh, I'm Obama Kennedy. We go to the moon because we can. Yes, we can.
Starting point is 00:35:44 Okay. Obama Kennedy. That's a really Irish sounding name. That's going to be my- Obama Kennedy. We go to the moon because we can. Yes, we can. Okay. Obama Kennedy. That's a really Irish sounding name. That's going to be my- Obama Kennedy. If I have another kid, I'm going to name it Obama Kennedy. So we choose to go to the moon, not because it's easy, but because it's hard. Because it's hard.
Starting point is 00:35:57 And in school, I used to wrestle. I wrestled not because it was easy, but because it was hard. Sometimes you want to do something hard, because then at the end of the day, you are in a new place, a place that others aren't there, because it was hard. Right. Sometimes you want to do something hard, because then at the end of the day, you are in a new place, a place that others aren't there because it was hard. Nice. I'm inspired. Jack. Yes.
Starting point is 00:36:11 All right, we got to take a break, and when we come back, it'll be Q&A time. Yes, it is. Cosmic Q&A. That's right. Reaching out to the peeps. Yes, that's right, and they're reaching out to us. There you have it. We'll be right back.
Starting point is 00:36:35 So, Chuck, we're back. Yes, we are. StarTalk Radio. And we've got the Q&A grab bag. The Q&A Cosmic Query section. That's right. Segment of the show. So it's the Grab Bag. No theme?
Starting point is 00:36:46 No theme. Just a bunch of questions from our listeners right here in this Grab Bag. You don't know what they are. I don't know what they are. You have not been briefed. If I don't know the answer, I'll just confess. I'll just fess up. That's right.
Starting point is 00:36:58 You know, that never happens, though. No. We always say that there's a possibility that it might happen, but it's never happened yet. Maybe it's because I have something to say about everything, whether or not it's the answer. Is that the key? Everything I say is correct. It's just not relevant to the question. There you go.
Starting point is 00:37:13 My God, you could run for office. That's what they do. That is fantastic. All right, let's jump right into this because we have James Isaac Dagenhart. That's the third. Where's the Roman numeral? Thank you. Okay.
Starting point is 00:37:27 I had read about something called modified Newtonian dynamics that was introduced as being a possible model that doesn't presume the existence of dark matter. Does this have any credibility or is this pseudoscience sensationalism? I'm reading on Time Science section. Cool. I love that he goes, oh, by the way, it was Time Magazine that we are questioning here.
Starting point is 00:37:52 He says, is this pseudoscience? Because I read it on Time Magazine. I read it on Time, basically. Yes, an indictment of Time Magazine is what we have there. It's a backhanded indictment. So he's referring to modified Newtonian, and we call it in my field,
Starting point is 00:38:06 modified Newtonian dynamics, and we call it in our field MOND Is the acronym MOND And it's an attempt to not be A prisoner of the mysterious Dark matter Extra gravity that we call dark matter Dark matter is what we call dark matter Really I think should be called dark gravity
Starting point is 00:38:22 Because 85% of all the gravity In the universe has no known origin Exactly So dark gravity because 85% of all the gravity in the universe has no known origin. Exactly. So dark gravity. Why would you call that dark matter? You don't even know if it's matter, so shut the hell up.
Starting point is 00:38:30 But we know it's dark gravity. It's definitely dark gravity. It's definitely dark. And that's because we know that the expansion is accelerating. Is that the reason? No, that's different. That's dark energy.
Starting point is 00:38:39 That's dark energy. Right, right, right. No, just stay with the gravity for the moment. Yes, yes. Okay, so there are things keeping galaxies and galaxy clusters together. Right. There's an extra force of gravity operating that we cannot account for by anything that we see, and even anything that we don't see that we know is made of real matter.
Starting point is 00:38:57 Gotcha. Like black holes or dark clouds or dark asteroids. You can add all those up. We have a way to account for those. or dark asteroids. You can add all those up. We have a way to account for those. Right.
Starting point is 00:39:08 And we are, in some places, a factor of 10, in other places, a factor of 100 off in accounting for what's making the gravity. Right. Okay, so there's a group that explored the possibility that maybe Newton's laws of gravity need an extra term in it. We know Newton's laws of gravity work in certain situations, but the situation's where it fails.
Starting point is 00:39:27 Maybe you have an extra term there. A term in an equation allows it to calculate other kinds of situations. Gotcha. So they just put in a term and said, here's this term, will it work? And surprisingly, they got explaining some things that had otherwise been explained by dark matter. Right.
Starting point is 00:39:44 And there's certain galaxies that orbit one another in small clusters. And so it's an intriguing alternative hypothesis. And it's had some legs. But every now and then somebody will discover a system that is not explainable by Mond. By Mond. And that sort of sends them back a few steps. Throws a monkey wrench into the plants. Throws a monkey wrench. then they come come back the point is right now we have no idea what dark matter is so you cannot completely shut down that operation right because it's trying to come
Starting point is 00:40:17 it's trying to explain things without anything exotic such as what dark matter would be and so i don't have a problem with that exercise. These are respectable scientists doing respectable work with postdocs and graduate students and things. But there are some cases that it cannot explain. Gotcha. So you can't say, well, throw the whole thing out the window because nobody else can explain them either. Right, right.
Starting point is 00:40:37 So who am I to say, get out the room when I don't have a better explanation? Right. So that's how that, so yes yes it's on the it's on the the edge of science it's on the edge but something's gotta be there it's not really pseudoscience no but it's not so it's frontier science thank you it's frontier science that has a lot of people who doubt it right but not on a level where we're gonna not not gonna to you. Not going to discount it. We're just going to doubt it. We're just going to doubt it. And you know what we call that? Science.
Starting point is 00:41:06 Exactly. Science. There you go. Next question. All right. Let's check out what Jared has to ask. Jared, what's his last name? Jared just goes with Jared, man.
Starting point is 00:41:18 He's like Cher. And Madonna. And Madonna. Okay, good. Right. It's just Jared. Okay. Jared says-
Starting point is 00:41:24 I guess both Madonnas had only one name, I guess, now that I think about it. Exactly. Which one is more famous, by the way? That's a good question. So here's what Jared says. Hey, Neil, quick question. I love his conversational tone. Huh?
Starting point is 00:41:37 Nice. Hey, Neil, quick question. As I am sure you get tons- Do I have a quick answer? See, that's what it really comes down to in the end, but go on. I'm sure you get tons of questions. Do I have a quick answer? See, that's what it really comes down to in the end. But go on. I'm sure you get tons of questions. But with the recent claim that the Higgs had been discovered over 99%, not quite 100%, a thought occurred to me.
Starting point is 00:41:55 If the Higgs gives mass to objects and the universe is normally symmetrical, i.e. matter, anti-matter, is there an anti-Higgs? If yes, could a theoretical anti-Higgs generator reduce mass enough to allow faster-than-light travel? Oh, man, this dude thinks he is the chief engineer on the Starship Enterprise. I'm thinking, and depending on his age, he's one of these kinds that I wonder what he's building in his basement. Oh, I know what he's smoking in his basement. Oh, I know what he's smoking in his basement. I don't know what he's building in his basement, but I know what he smoked before he tried to build it. All right.
Starting point is 00:42:35 So basically, let's talk about this anti-Higgs, anti-matter. Could this happen? Yeah. So the Higgs particle is what's called a boson. And there are some particle physics classes that i never took and so some of what i know there i learned osmotically from particle physics colleagues of mine the rest i learned formally so i may be stepping across that edge right now okay but higgs being a boson boson is a class of particle that does not itself have an antiparticle okay like a photon light is or is a
Starting point is 00:43:05 boson there's no anti-photon right all right so uh so what you're so the the premise here would be that same boson would be granting mass to an antiparticle just as it would be granting mass to a particle gotcha that's my answer and if i'm wrong one of my physics colleagues will write we'll tell you they're right yeah yeah but i yeah. But that's because of the class of particle that it is. Right. So whatever's going on in his basement, he has to modify his plans. Yes. And please stop it, whatever you're doing in your basement.
Starting point is 00:43:35 Please. Okay? We don't want to, you know. Okay. All right. Which the other question, the follow-up to this is, since we're talking about the Higgs boson, and this is the classic question that everybody has, is could you actually create a black hole on Earth? You wouldn't want to.
Starting point is 00:43:52 Okay. But you could. Oh, you could. Oh, yeah. Oh, okay. Yeah, yeah. And in a lab, I mean, in principle, you can create a region of matter so dense and small that it would classify as a black hole. What happens is small black holes evaporate according to Hawking radiation.
Starting point is 00:44:07 The small ones evaporate way faster than big ones. So if you make a tiny mini microscopic black hole, it might evaporate before it has a chance to eat the earth. Gotcha. But we don't want to find that. That's right. Yeah, that's something we don't want to find. My favorite line, I'm told it was from a, I don't remember this line, but people tell
Starting point is 00:44:23 me from a Kurt Vonnegut novel. He hypothesized what the very last sentence ever spoken by humanity was. And what was that? It was, let's try it this way. It's two scientists having a conversation. That's great. Let's try it this way. Oh, I love it. I love it. Yeah i love it yeah okay well hey thanks jared uh please stop
Starting point is 00:44:48 doing whatever you're doing your basement and we appreciate you yeah all right we got time for like i think one more one more here we go this is ryan first quick comment i absolutely love the show and can't get enough of it please keep it up all right thank you and now for a question uh is it my understanding that a black hole will just vanish and disappear at the end of its life? Now, you just touched on this. And if that's so, and here's his question. That's why I'm reading it. And E equals MC squared 2 or MC squared.
Starting point is 00:45:17 What happens to the energy and all the particles? So in a vanishing black hole. So since we just learned, you just said this, that some of them vanish. Okay, all black holes evaporate. Every understanding we have of quantum physics and relativity, as advanced to us by the brain work of Stephen Hawking,
Starting point is 00:45:38 in fact, it's called Hawking radiation, the fact that a black hole will evaporate. Its evaporation is, its energy field is so intense that matter spontaneously spawns in that energy field. Wow. And in so doing, the black hole loses mass.
Starting point is 00:45:54 Gotcha. And so the act of its losing mass is because it's sending matter and energy out beyond its event horizon. Right. So it's evaporating not into thin air, it's evaporating into thin space, but that energy is recovered
Starting point is 00:46:08 in the volume of space into which it has evaporated. So there's no loss of, equals MC squared, it's still intact. It's still intact, because there is no loss of energy. What's even more amazing
Starting point is 00:46:17 is every atom that went in, if I drop you into a black hole, there's an accounting of that, a mysterious quantum accounting of every particle of you that went in so that you look at the particles that evaporate out from the energy field. Right. That tally will come out equaling the tally of atoms that went in in the first place.
Starting point is 00:46:36 The black hole remembered what it ate. Oh my God, it's like a cosmic nightclub. Two people in, two people out. You got it. This has been StarTalk Radio. Chuck, thanks for being on, as always. I'm Neil deGrasse Tyson, bidding you to keep looking up.

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