SciShow Tangents - Cars
Episode Date: September 8, 2020Beep beep, toot toot, etc. Cars are definitely one of the more common-place things we’ve talked about on Tangents… yet to some, including many on our panel, they are even more mysterious and conf...using than the human body or the fundamental forces of nature! Follow us on Twitter @SciShowTangents, where we’ll tweet out topics for upcoming episodes and you can ask the science couch questions! While you're at it, check out the Tangents crew on Twitter: Stefan: @itsmestefanchin Ceri: @ceriley Sam: @slamschultz Hank: @hankgreenIf you want to learn more about any of our main topics, check out these links: [Truth or Fail]Freeze-dryinghttps://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2020-03/nuos-nit031820.phpReplacing human tissueshttps://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2020-03/cuot-nrm031320.phphttps://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acsnano.9b01924Batterieshttps://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/08/140827151654.htmhttps://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2014/RA/C4RA03888F#!divAbstract [Fact Off]Added engine noisehttps://www.caranddriver.com/features/a15117726/faking-it-engine-sound-enhancement-explained-tech-dept/https://www.carthrottle.com/post/5-ways-that-manufacturers-enhance-the-sound-of-their-cars/https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/americas-best-selling-cars-and-trucks-are-built-on-lies-the-rise-of-fake-engine-noise/2015/01/21/6db09a10-a0ba-11e4-b146-577832eafcb4_story.htmlhttps://www.popularmechanics.com/cars/a7923/the-rise-of-the-fake-engine-roar-11291754/https://www.caranddriver.com/features/a15107374/this-is-why-various-engine-types-sound-so-different-feature/ [Ask the Science Couch]Wheels vs. trackshttps://litetrax.com/wheels-vs-tracks-advantages-disadvantages/https://www.macallisterrentals.com/track-vs-wheeled-equipment-type-machine-rent/3 vs. 4 wheelshttps://thenewswheel.com/why-do-cars-have-four-wheels/https://jalopnik.com/why-three-wheels-are-better-than-four-5950307 [Butt One More Thing]https://www.fertstert.org/article/S0015-0282(07)01404-5/pdfÂ
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to SciShow Tangents, the lightly competitive knowledge showcase starring
some of the geniuses that make the YouTube series SciShow happen.
This week, as always, I'm joined by Stefan Chin. Hello. What's the best like a road surface?
Probably pavement, but like well-maintained asphalt. What's your tagline? Hot sauce paradise.
Oh, I don't know why that made me feel like I was going to take a bath in hot sauce, but I don't want to do that.
Sam Schultz is also here
today. Hello. Sam, what was your
first screen name? Oh, I've never
had one I liked, so I don't even remember.
What's your tagline?
World-renowned inventor of the breakfast hot
dog. I love the sound
of that. Sari Riley is
joining us as well today.
Hello. Do you have a favorite monkey?
Oh, just like a gorilla because its scientific name is Gorilla Gorilla. And I gave a report
on them in first grade and I think it was the first ever school report that I practiced.
What's your tagline, Sari?
An asymmetrical shirt. And I'm Hank Green, and my tagline is glass half empire.
Wow.
What's the other half?
It was almost something.
Every week here on SciShow Tangents, we try to one-up and amaze and delight each other with science facts.
We're playing for glory.
We're also keeping score and awarding sandbox from week to week. And we do what we can to stay on topic, but we're not
great at that. So if somebody goes off on a tangent and the rest of the team deems it unworthy,
we will force you to give up one of your sandbox. So tangent with care. Now, as always,
we introduce this week's topic with the traditional science poem this week from Sam.
Ford Focus, Honda Fit, the Stingray and the Corvette, Riviera and Camaro, Chevrolet, This week from Sam. El Camino pickup bed, put in gas that's got no lead.
Take your Woody to the beach, make the rubber tires screech.
Arrow car with flight bestowed, amphicar aquatic mode.
If the road is what you seek, for a steering wheel you reach.
These are all types of cars.
Got combustion engines, people riding in them.
These are all types of cars.
There's also the Range Rover. Now my poem is over.
Wow.
Yes.
Wow. What were you thinking?
Well, I thought of the, these are all types of cars
in the shower.
So I thought of the whole
chorus while I was in the car, or in the
shower, and then the rest I had to
just make work, because I couldn't
think of anything else. Terry, what is what is a car well that's a great question I feel like from my heart a car is
something that if I point and look at it it has an engine like a combustion engine well it doesn't
have to be a combustion engine Tesla makes cars cars. Okay. And then cars usually have four wheels.
I guess they can be electric or gas powered and can usually carry passengers or, I don't know, are operated by a driver sometimes.
Whether that driver is a human or a computer.
Sari, where does the word car come from?
Like in other places, they call them auto.
And I'm like, yeah, that makes sense.
That comes from
like automobile,
which is like a mobile thing
that moves by itself.
But car comes from
the Proto-Indo-European
cursos
from the root word
K-E-R-S
or curs,
which means to run.
And then it seems like
from there
it got adapted
to any sort of moving thing.
So it turned into car for chariot or wagon.
And then just like kept moving
through the wheeled vehicles that humans developed.
Interesting.
And now it is time for Truth or Fail.
One of our panelists has brought three science facts for our education and enjoyment,
but only one of those facts is real, and the other two are totally fake,
and we have to figure out, either by deduction or wild guess, which is the true fact.
If we do get a sandbuck, if we're tricked, then Stefan will get the sandbuck,
because Stefan has brought the facts today.
Stefan, what are your facts?
Okay, this is about recycling tires. because Stefan has brought the facts today. Stefan, what are your facts?
Okay, this is about recycling tires.
So we produce several hundred million waste tires in the US every year.
And about 90% of them are actually recycled,
which is very surprising.
But burning them counts as recycling
and we burn about half of them.
That's definitely not recycling.
Unless like you're talking about like in an incinerator where they generate power. Yeah, yeah. They like mulch. That's definitely not recycling. Are you talking about in an incinerator
where they generate power?
Yeah, yeah.
They mulch them up.
Still not recycling.
Well, they're reused in a way that is not clean.
They are used.
I can tell you that they are used.
Well, by most articles' definitions,
it's counted as recycling.
But apparently also the tires that are just sitting around in landfills and stuff are there's a problem with like mosquitoes
using them as like a breeding ground so that's not good so here are three things that are ways
that we could potentially recycle some tires but only one of them is true. Okay. Number one, we could use old tires to make new tires.
I love the possibility that this one isn't true.
It's just like an impossibility.
Okay, continue.
It is possible already, but you can only use a small amount of recycled material in each new tire.
And the new tires that are made this way are worse. They have
worse traction and they wear out much faster. But a team in Singapore recently made a breakthrough
in processing old tires using a freeze drying process. And then the resulting recycled rubber
was much higher quality, which opens the door for a more circular economy with tires.
Number two, we could use old tires as a replacement
for human tissues.
So a Swedish team has
developed a process to refine old tire
material into a
very soft elastic material
that could be used in its
solid or liquid form to
make medical devices or to even be
injected into the body. As an example,
reducing friction in joints where the cartilage has broken down.
Whoa.
Or number three, we could use them in batteries.
So by processing recovered carbon black from tires and bathing them in sulfuric acid,
researchers were able to make anodes for lithium-ion batteries
that outperformed electrodes made from the typically used graphite.
Well, very interesting.
So, fact number one,
we've got Singapore scientists
freeze-drying tires
that allows them to more easily
re-enter the tire-making,
I don't know, supply chain, I guess.
Number two, creating some kind of substance
that you can use inside of
human bodies to reduce friction and joints maybe or three uh you can process some recovered carbon
black from tires to make anodes for lithium ion batteries that are better than the anodes that we
currently use tell me more about injecting tires well they're no longer tires at that point
derived okay so they do something
to the tires. Yeah, I mean, they're doing things
to all... All of these are processed
versions of tires. They're being very
cagey.
Do they, like, re-petroleumize
them or something? Is that what tires are made out of?
I don't know. You gotta turn them back into
something slippery, though.
The injection one
is the one that I know the least about the process
yeah and i guess like just thinking about property wise not knowing enough chemistry
or having stefan inform us of the chemistry it's like you take a rubber and then make it into
probably smaller chain hydrocarbon and you do use organic chemicals as drug molecules or things like that. So like that
basic, basic logic is conceivable. Like it doesn't set any red flags off. But also I just keep
thinking of injecting tires into myself and becoming the Michelin man. Which is not this.
Those are so much bigger. My joints could be tires.
Those are so much bigger.
My joints could be tires.
I can definitely see some kind of system for when you process a that like the existing tire rubber would would be bad for for some reason but i can definitely if you're
trying to get like old tires back into new tires it makes sense to me that you would need to do
some chemistry to them before you did that what is freeze drying just sucking all the water out of it
i think so it is both sucking water out of it? I think so. It is
both sucking water out and making it cold.
But I feel like there's not a lot of
water in a tire. I think it's also
like a vacuum thing. So freeze drying
I think it does that by sucking
out all of the everything.
And so you
suck out, you get them in a vacuum
basically. You both make them cold
and put them in a vacuum at the same time.
So freeze drying, I don't think necessarily has to be about water.
It could be about sucking out other volatiles.
What was the last one?
Carbon black and a battery.
I'm not going to Google what carbon black is, but I know it's a thing.
I know it exists.
Yeah, it's like a black sooty looking stuff that's left over from partially combusting hydrocarbons.
Okay.
Okay.
So it's different than like activated charcoal or something like that.
It's like a separate material, but still black and powdery.
Yeah.
I've heard that it has some kind of interesting nanoscale structure.
You can get like buckyballs and nanotubes and stuff, carbon black, maybe.
Maybe. Or like maybe you make those things from carbon black sometimes. I don't know.
I'm going to go with carbon black. I feel like carbon black is useful and maybe tires are a
good way to get it. I don't know why that would be. That's how I feel.
I'm also going to go with the last one. I don't know why. It was like in listening to Stefan explain all of these,
my brain was very skeptical for the first two.
And then the third one was like, eh, sure.
I think I'm going to go for the first one, the freeze-dried tires,
just because I know repurposed tires are bad, or at least I've heard that.
Because truck drivers use them sometimes, I think,
and they fling tire chunks all over the place.
So that just seems like something people will be trying to solve to me, too.
I agree.
If it is the middle one, I'm going to be incensed.
Because there's no way that people are injecting lubricant into their joints.
Okay.
Oh, before Stefan tells us, go to twitter.com slash scishowtangents
and vote for the one that you think is correct and play along with us.
Because we get such a small sample size here in the SciShow Tangents virtual studio.
So join us over there.
Pause if you must.
And then, Stephen, tell us the answer.
So the true one is the batteries.
Yay!
No.
Phew.
Yeah, I don't know if carbon black, if like the best way to get it is from tires but
i think if i'm remembering correctly 70 of all carbon black is used in the production of tires
isn't it what gives the tires their color this is the thing that i wanted to say but
wanted to mislead hank and sam like, tires would be naturally a different color,
but then it helps darken them so they look cool.
I think it, yeah,
I think it does contribute to that.
Because they mentioned
that it's used as a pigment
in, like, some inks
or plastics or things.
And it's, like,
a very black substance
on its own.
So that would make sense to me.
But this team has developed
their proprietary, like, process
using this sulfuric acid bath to pre-treat
the rubber and then heating it up until it all breaks down. And then they use the recovered
carbon black from that to make the anodes for lithium ion batteries specifically. And I guess
for that kind of battery, those anodes are usually made from graphite, which is also a form of carbon,
but the production of graphite is pretty dirty. And so this is a much cleaner way to do it. And you mentioned like the
sort of nanostructures on the surface of carbon black, and that seems to be playing a part here
too, where those unique structures make it perform better than graphite as an anode. I think it has
to do with the number, size, and like distribution of the little nanopores on the surface.
But it's, I don't know, it's all very complicated
and I didn't understand it.
But those structures combined with their
proprietary pre-treatment process
seem to improve its efficiency at conducting electricity.
And so yeah, it ends up being a cheaper and cleaner
and better anode for lithium batteries, which is, I think, the primary one that's used in electric cars.
Yes.
So are we injecting people with lubricants, Stefan?
Okay, so this one has nothing to do with tires.
But this Swedish team was trying to make a hard like bone like synthetic substance.
And I think they started with the same foundation material as plexiglass.
But after they did their like special process to it, they ended up with a really soft elastic rubber like material that they were very surprised by.
No good for bones.
Not good for bones, but because it's based on materials that we know are safe in the body
and they apparently can use it in solid or liquid form.
They were saying the first use they were looking at
was like to make catheter tubes.
So like you can make medical devices out of it,
but it can also be injected or inserted into the body
and should be fairly non-toxic.
And so they were looking at like using it
in a viscous liquid form to like re-lubricate your joints
after the cartilage has decayed.
Or they said that you could also use it in plastic surgery
in place of like Botox.
And so then the freeze-dried one is not about tire.
Well, it is about tires,
but it's using tires to make rubber aerogels.
And so it's this team in Singapore,
they filed a patent this year for like their novel technology for turning tires into rubber aerogel.
And I didn't realize that aerogels, I thought it was just like one material that's like really
this really low density airy stuff. But apparently it could be a range of materials that are produced
in a certain way so that you end up with like you take this gel and you freeze dry it, which removes all the liquid.
But it leaves the solid matrix that's in the gel.
And so then you have like an aerogel.
But you can have an aerogel made from a bunch of different things.
And I guess they're the first ones to make this rubber aerogel.
And aerogels in general are kind of brittle.
But this one,
because it's rubbery, can sort of spring back into shape. And so they think it's much more durable than other versions of it. What's aerogel? So you have a gel. A gel is like solid particles
mixed with liquid particles. And an aerogel is when those liquid particles are gas instead of
being liquid.
Is it squishy?
It's not as squishy as you would think.
Have you touched it?
I thought it would be squishy.
I have touched aerogel.
It felt like a dry cracker.
You've touched it too?
When was this?
How are you touching this?
I've got so many things to be cranky about today.
Have to define cars.
I haven't touched aerogel and my friends have
well i hope that you're not cranky about the break that we're about to take this is my segue
welcome back everybody uh we are have a tie ball game right now everybody has one point cool which is pretty unusual but sari and i have a chance to take the lead because it's time for the fact off
we've each brought in a science fact to present to the other in an attempt to blow their minds.
And whichever fact blows the mind the most
is going to be rewarded a sandbuck
by the people we are presenting our facts to.
And who goes first is going to be decided
with a trivia question.
It will be read to us by Stefan.
So the question is,
horsepower is a unit of measure
equal to the power needed to lift how many pounds
one foot into the air in one second?
Oh, rats.
It's like one horse.
How much does a horse weigh?
I'm just going to guess 50 pounds.
Wait, what is the thing?
One foot in the air?
In one second.
Oh, in one second?
200.
Yeah, I felt like I was low.
Hank's only experienced weak horses.
The answer is 550 pounds.
Oh, gosh.
Stronger than both of us.
Yeah, very strong.
Okay, I'll go first.
So I've heard one thing that can feel really satisfied when you're driving a car is the vroom vroom of an engine.
You've driven a car before, right? Yeah, Stefan really likes the vroom vroom of an engine. You've driven a car before. Yeah,
Stefan really likes the vroom vroom. I'm ambivalent to it. If it can get me from one place to another,
I like it. So these particular vroom sound waves come from the combustion in engine cylinders
and the way the engine is shaped and how engine cylinders fire and the airflow through the intake
and exhaust systems and different combinations
of those movement make different rooms and modern engines are built in ways so that the natural
engine sounds are quieter or relatively non-existent like i mentioned with electric cars
but car companies are like people really like the vroom so in an apparently controversial move
certain automakers are using different means of sound enhancement to make cars sound more car-like through amplification or even artificially.
I'm not surprising Stefan with this.
My mind was blown.
I was like, people care about the broom enough to make it?
They do.
So one in Ford and maybe Porsches have a thing called a sound symposer, which is basically a tube that
runs from the air intake, I think, or engine intake, one of those things, to behind the
dashboard to pipe the good sound waves in. And there's an electronic flap that opens and closes
to give you more vroom at appropriate times, like when you're speeding up and less vroom.
Wow. This isn't for the people around. It's just for you.
Yeah. It's like personalized sound. Yeah, it's like personalized sound.
So you can feel like you're going fast.
Oh, wow.
Number two, BMW has a system
that plays a synthetic engine sound
through the car's speakers,
which is basically like a vroom soundtrack
combined with some amplification
of the actual engine sound.
So that's like half artificial, half real.
And number three,
Volkswagen has something called the Soundactor
or Sound Actuator,
which is a sort of buzzing hockey puck size speaker
that adds noise to the part of the car
between the engine and the cabin for the vroom sound.
And it's completely from an audio file
on the car's computer as far as I can tell,
or it was for a while.
And then I think now it might be a mix.
Wow.
And that's my fact. It's just like, apparently people love the broom so much that
their car companies are inventing many different ways to sneak it into. Right. And all of them,
and all of them are just for the person driving the car. All of the ones you talked about just
now. So weird. Look, driving a car is a five cents experience. So yeah yeah if you don't have the right sounds it's just not the same
well yeah i feel it and i like the idea of having the sound piped in so that i on the street do not
have to hear it just because you and the car wish to so if you want to if you want your car to be
loud and you have to make it so loud that you it feels loud in the car when the like the noise
maker part of the car is pointing back away from you then you're gonna have to make that way louder
so i want them to pipe it in so that you feel like your car is super loud the second thing is
i it's interesting that they're trying to make this you hear the natural sound rather than the
volkswagen angle of like we just pipe it in through the speakers
because it has to be this like natural thing or else people will be like, this is fake.
Yes.
But I like the fake angle because then theoretically I can hack my car and make it sound like a pigeon.
Well, that's great, Sari. I'm really impressed because that's like,
I feel like that's a fairly deep cut from the car world.
Yes.
For a non-car person to find.
That was my hope.
I was like,
I want some car people
to listen to this episode
and feel satisfied afterwards.
So I hope I taught you something.
I like it.
I like that there were
so many different ways to do it too.
Everybody's got a different idea.
But it's not as good as this fact.
So automatic transmissions are great
and I use one and have never not used one.
They were invented in the early 20th century
and worked really well for several decades
with less than 1 million failures every year.
But around 1975,
the number of failures in automatic transmissions
shot up to around 8 million per year. Why? Because of the Endangered Species Act and import bans.
What? So it turns out, we all know what the Endangered Species Act is. It was passed to
protect animals that were on the verge of extinction including
the sperm whale what the heck does this have to do with automatic transmissions well sperm whale oil
was used as the oil in automatic transmissions to keep them running smoothly up until 1975
it's been used a lot, this substance,
in cars and ships and other industries
because it's really good at not oxidizing
and maintaining a steady viscosity
over a wide range of temperatures.
But there's no way to get sperm whale oil
except to kill sperm whales.
And so when we decided to stop doing that so much
and also to ban the import of sperm whale oil from non-participating countries to decrease the demand on their population, there just wasn't a way to get the oil.
So car companies had a really hard time replacing that oil.
Their initial attempts would corrode the fittings that connected the transmission's cooling unit to the radiator, causing oil to get into the radiator and antifreeze to get into the transmission. And that was really bad. GM had an
informal arrangement to pay back the work that people had to do to fix this issue, which was
around $2,000 in today's dollars. If you had a problem like this, GM would like give you the
money, but there was no formal recall. But eventually, chemistry has a way to solve problems. And in this case, instead of sperm whales, we found
the jojoba plant. And its oil is an ester just like sperm whale oil. And that makes it distinct
from many vegetable oils and it gives it a longer shelf life. And jojoba seeds are about 50% oil. But because there were not a lot of jojoba plants in production at the time, they just
used that as a model for creating synthetic oils that would do the same job as the sperm
oil or the jojoba oil.
And that was what we ended up using in cars to fix that problem.
All right, everybody, time to make your assignments of points.
So will it be Sari's fact some car manufacturers artificially
and controversially enhance engine sounds because people like the vroom?
Or my fact, when car manufacturers were no longer able to use sperm whale oil
in transmission, they developed new fluids based on jojoba oil.
Three, two, one. Hank. S hank sary yes ah dang it i wanted
both of those i wanted both of those i got stephan car guy chin yeah i didn't know about the sperm
whale thing though that's how could you not give the point to the sperm whale thing if you didn't
know about it well because he likes noise i'm a vroom vroom man, so I'm more personally invested in Sari's fact.
Also, the sperm whale oil went vroom vroom.
It made the cars vroom more.
I also drive a manual, yeah.
Yeah.
That explains it.
I don't need sperm whale oil.
Yeah, just pump in that vroom sound and you're good to go.
Yeah.
And now it's time to ask the science couch. We've got a listener
question for our couch of finely honed
scientific minds. It's from
at creb shouting who says
I've always wanted to know why
we settled on wheels, not
tracks like a tank or
legs like those in robots that can
navigate rough terrain. And why
four?
I think I can like clearly say legs is a harder problem to solve
legs is bad yeah but but sari do you have anything on on why wheels are better than tracks i think
for similar but less obvious reason than like legs are are complicated and expensive and difficult to balance. But tracks
versus wheels, physics wise, give you different advantages. And most of the reading that I did
on this had to do with tanks or construction equipment because you don't see like consumer
vehicles rolling around on tracks. But it seems like tracks are, as the name would imply, really good for traction and
rough terrain and distribute the pressure across the ground better. So if you think of like a
snowboard versus an ice skate, where the ice skate has a really thin blade and like puts pressure
and melts the ice. But also if you're like walking in snow, it'll probably sink in. But a snowboard,
it distributes the pressure so you can sit on top of the snow even though it's still holding
your weight. Tracks on snow can distribute the weight of the vehicle more, whereas wheels are
more likely to sink in because they have four points of pressure. But on the other hand,
wheels are easier to control and turn. So it makes your vehicle more spry
and it's just like lower cost, lightweight,
all things that vehicle manufacturers
probably looked at and were like,
ah, yes, why would I equip every single car
with slow, expensive tracks
when I could just do tires,
which are cheaper and easy to replace?
If you inflate a tire,
it becomes the size it should be.
And it's important to have inflated stuff
when we're driving
because inflated things don't tear up the road,
which is something that we don't often think about.
It's like the impact of the tire on the road matters.
And it would be difficult to have an inflatable track too
that would like wrap around these interior wheels
because I think if you drove a traction track
like a tank has on roads,
if we were all doing that,
the roads would need to be replaced every few months.
Well, maybe we just wouldn't need roads.
You could just roll around.
Whatever.
We're going, we don't need roads
because they've all disintegrated
because we drive tanks now.
That feels like something that
we're going to look back on this episode in 10 years
and be like, ah, Hank was right.
He was ahead of the curve on everybody driving
tanks. Yeah, the
next step isn't flying cars, it's
tanks. So everyone can still go
wherever they want, but we just haven't figured
out how to lift off. Yeah.
Well, if Elon Musk has his way, the next step
isn't flying cars, it's burrowing cars.
We'll just have big drill bits
on the front of our cars.
We can go anywhere we want.
I love that and the instability
it'll lend to every single thing
on this planet.
Yeah, it'd be great.
We'll just drive right through
the sewer pipes,
the water pipes,
telecommunications, whatever.
I didn't know that.
That is like sincerely worrying to me
that he thinks it's a good idea.
He doesn't want individual
cars to drill. Oh, he just wants the tunnel.
Yeah, he wants lots of tunnels. But
for clarity, Sari, it's still a
terrible idea. Yeah.
If
you photoshopped a Tesla with a
drill and sent it to me in
like a press release-y type article, I
would think it was real if you
want to ask the science couch your question you can follow us on twitter at sci-show tangents
where we'll tweet out topics from upcoming episodes every week thank you to at aaron
winnick at mads 2103 and everybody else who tweeted us your questions for this episode
final sandbox scores sari and i tied for the lead. Sam and Stefan coming in just one point behind us,
which leads us to Stefan and Sari still being tied.
Yeah, I really could have influenced that game
by giving my point to Hank, but...
Yeah, you could have.
And it's not like I'm going to do anything with it
because I am a full 10 points behind you guys.
If you like this show and you want to help us out,
it's easy to do that. You can leave us a review
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And finally, if you want to show your love for SciShow
Tangents, just tell people
about us. Thank you for joining us.
I've been Hank Green. I've been Sari Reilly.
I've been Stefan Jin. And I've been Sam Schultz.
SciShow Tangents is a co-production of
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and produced by Caitlin Hoffmeister and Sam Schultz,
who edits a lot of these episodes along with
Hiroko Matsushima. Our social media organizer
is Paola Garcia Prieto. Our editorial
assistant is Deboki Chakravarti. Our
sound design is by Joseph Tunamedish.
And we couldn't make any of this without our patrons on Patreon. Thank you! And remember, the mind is not a vessel to be filled,
but a fire to be lighted.
But one more thing.
So everybody likes heated seats, right?
And they warm up your butt because it's a butt fact.
But also if you're somebody with testicles, they might warm up those too.
So some researchers were wondering about that because heated testicles can be a problem. So in 2008, a group of researchers published their results following a study of 30 men who were asked to sit for 90 minutes on either a heated or unheated car seat and then had their scrotal temperatures measured.
So men who sat on unheated seats averaged a scrotal temperature of 36.7 degrees Celsius.
And those on heated seats had a scrotal temperature of 37.3 degrees Celsius.
So based on these results,
the researchers suggested
that hot car seats
could impact semen quality,
though they did not investigate further
within this experiment.
So I guess this doesn't just apply
to heated seats,
but also like a real hot leather seat
that you sit on.
Well, scrotums are the most weird part of the body they sure are yeah