SciShow Tangents - Magnets
Episode Date: January 14, 2020Wise men have long pondered how magnets work. We all know the answer is “magic,” but Ceri and Hank have to keep up the illusion that science is real, so please humor them.Follow us on Twitter @Sci...ShowTangents, 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]Magnet Therapyhttps://www.livescience.com/40174-magnetic-therapy.htmlGod Machinehttp://www.bbc.co.uk/science/horizon/2003/godonbrain.shtmlhttps://science.howstuffworks.com/life/inside-the-mind/human-brain/brain-religion2.htmhttps://www.psypost.org/2018/01/fake-god-helmet-can-elicit-extraordinary-experiences-especially-among-spiritual-people-50619https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/2153599X.2017.1403952https://mysteriousuniverse.org/2018/01/test-of-god-helmet-at-music-fest-yields-strange-results/Electro-Metabographhttps://books.google.com/books?id=CeMDAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA218&lpg=PA218&dq=Electro-metabograph+machine&source=bl&ots=JjXhceV_VG&sig=ACfU3U3mlpAO1DmRW9B8ef9cSK12nuCRew&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjs2dOe6b_mAhXSHjQIHZPICLMQ6AEwEHoECAoQAQ#v=onepage&q=Electro-metabograph%20machine&f=falseRadium Ore Revigatorhttps://www.nationalgeographic.com/news/2010/1/100118-radiation-toxic-water-revigator/[Fact Off]Airport runways/WMMhttps://www.wired.com/story/airports-rename-runways-magnetic-shift/https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/airport-runway-names-shift-magnetic-fieldhttps://cires.colorado.edu/news/airport-runway-names-shift-earth%E2%80%99s-magnetic-fieldhttps://flightsafety.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/asw_may08_p18-22.pdfhttps://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/geomag/GeomagneticPoles.shtmlhttps://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/world-magnetic-model-2020-releasedFerrofluidshttp://aerospace.mtu.edu/research/ionic-liquid-ferrofluid-microthrusters/https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/chemistry/ferrofluidhttps://aip.scitation.org/doi/10.1063/1.4985141[Ask the Science Couch]Demagnetizinghttps://www.wired.com/story/the-physics-of-falling-magnets-in-stranger-things-season-3/https://nationalmaglab.org/education/magnet-academy/plan-a-lesson/demagnetizinghttp://www.magmamagnets.com/electromagnets-solenoids/https://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/150570/what-is-the-difference-between-electromagnet-and-solenoid[Butt One More Thing]Magnetic anal sphincterhttps://newsnetwork.mayoclinic.org/discussion/mayo-clinic-first-to-implant-device-to-solve-fecal-incontinence/https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27926562https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21654242
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 Stephan Chin.
Hello.
Stephan, how do you like the cover of my new book?
Oh, it's good.
Beautifully foolish endeavor.
It's the best cover I've ever seen.
Thanks.
It's very bright.
It'll be out July 7th, but you can pre-order it now.
Oh, wow.
Oh, my God.
What's your tagline?
It's almost wing night.
And Sam Schultz is also here. Sam. Yeah. Where? Oh, my God. What's your tagline? It's almost wing night. And Sam Schultz is also here.
Sam.
Yeah?
Where can you preorder my new book, A Beautifully Foolish Endeavor?
I don't know.
Am I going to get in trouble for not knowing?
No, you just guess some places that might have it.
Amazon.com?
Yeah, it's there.
Your local bookstore?
Uh-huh.
Anywhere a fine book is sold?
That's correct.
What's your tagline?
A Beautifully Foolish Endeavor.
Wow.
Hi, Sarah.
It's great to see you.
Oh, thanks.
What's your favorite book?
Oh.
Don't get this wrong.
I feel like I'm reserving the top book spot for A Beautifully Foolish Endeavor, which is coming out July 2020.
I think we're going to get in trouble.
What do you mean?
I don't know. We're probably fine.
If you guys have a book coming out, we can dedicate a whole intro of Tangents to yours as well.
Oh my god.
What's your tagline?
Water casket.
And I'm Hank Green, and my tagline is woo.
Water casket. Very well, May. The rest of the team gets to vote on whether or not it was worth it. And if it isn't, then you have to give up a Sam Buck.
And now, as always, to introduce this week's topic, we have the traditional science poem.
This week, it's part poem by me, part poem by someone else.
So it starts out with a different person's poem and then we segue.
Yeah, this is great.
Music is a lot like love.
It's all a feeling.
And it fills the room from the floor to the ceiling.
I see miracles all around me. Stop and look around. It's all astounding.
Water, fire, air, and dirt. Fucking magnets. How do they work?
Thus spoke the men of the insane clown posse.
They go on to say that they will not trust me. Scientists are lying. Scientists get them pissed. But I think the ICP, well, a couple points they missed. Forces are a kind of miracle,
these connections we cannot see. They drive the entire universe from Betelgeuse to me.
And when you send an electron down a wire, it does seem odd that fields arise,
send an electron down a wire,
it does seem odd that fields arise,
fields that never tire.
I know that science has answers,
but after all these years on Earth,
I still sit here and ask,
Sari, fucking magnets,
how do they work?
Oh my gosh.
Cameo by Beetlejuice in there, too.
Beetlejuice the star. I know, but come on.
I also got distracted.
Beetlejuice.
You said it only once but now collectively
we've said it three times i have a hard time with with magnets on it i guess i have a hard time with
all forces though yeah like it just feels like gravity makes sense because i've always like i
feel it all the time but it doesn't really it doesn't make any more sense than magnets. But magnets, I'm just like, I can't see it.
And yet they're interacting.
And it makes things don't go down that you feel like should go down, like gravity.
It makes things don't go down.
Yeah.
Magnets go on the wall.
Yeah.
Shouldn't work.
They should go down.
I feel like that was a mini poem from Sam.
I think I know how magnets work. and so i will talk and explain them but as
soon as someone asks me a question it's gonna fall apart okay so i'll just be very quiet
so a magnet is an object or a piece of technology that we've created that gives off a magnetic field
and it applies a force on things like other magnets. So magnets can
either be natural. An iron containing compound called magnetite is a natural magnet. And this
is where it gets wibbly. There are parts of it, like very small parts of it that when aligned
generate a magnetic field. So like when you draw a magnetic field you draw it as like
if it's a circle and the north pulls on the top and the south pulls on the bottom it like comes
out of the north and then goes into the south and that is how you draw a magnetic field if those
particles or electrons or or whatever physics is happening inside the rock are aligned in some
direction that is like the direction the magnetic field will align but if they're randomized so if it's just like a nail with randomly oriented
particles then it will not be magnetic is that sorry i'm gonna ask a question is it that there's
no magnetic field because there's a bunch of magnetic fields that are canceling out
and then when they do align they all add together and create something that affects things.
Yes.
So it's like atoms or particles or electrons
or some sort of like subatomic atomic particle
have what are known as magnetic moments.
Beautiful.
Like how a molecule can be a dipole and have a charged end.
They can also have a magnetic moment,
which is like a magnetic field in some direction.
And so when they're all misaligned, then there's no strong field in any direction.
But if they're all aligned in one, then it like cumulates in a giant magnetic field.
So like with an electromagnet, is it something that you turn the power off?
That's a totally separate thing.
Oh, it is?
Well, it's not a totally separate thing.
It's still magnets. But like the power's off and they're all not aligned and then the power's on That's a totally separate thing. Oh, it is? So electromagnets... Well, it's not a totally separate thing. They're still magnets.
But, like, the power's off and they're all not aligned, and then the power's on and they go...
So, with an electromagnet, it is a coil of wire around, like, a piece of iron or something like that.
And in that, the electric current is generating the magnetic field.
So it's actually the electrons passing through the wire.
When you push electrons through a wire, they create a magnetic field around them.
Okay.
But magnetism and electricity are different.
Well, technically they're the same thing if you go deep enough.
So like there's Faraday's law, I think, which is how it relates it.
Like your E field is your electric field and your b field is your
magnetic field and there's a relationship between those things it's like how energy and mass are the
same thing but not like that stuff out there we got to give up we got to rewrite all the rules
that's why there's like new editions of board games and stuff you get rid of the rules that
are just too complicated you can't keep track of all those rules yeah yeah that's right we have to
do that with magnets okay Okay. You're just...
Magnets, you're done.
We don't need you.
Deprecated.
No longer supported.
Sari, is there an etymology to magnets?
There is, and it's kind of cool.
So it comes from the old French magnet, which is magnetite, which is from Latin magnetum,
which is from Greek, homagnus lithos,
the magnesium stone.
There's a region in Greece called
Thessaly, and then there's a sub-region of that
called Magnesia, where they found
lodestones. And so they were like,
this rock from this place is so
cool, and so it's named after a place.
Oh my gosh. All magnets. That's amazing.
That's my favorite part of the show.
And now it's time for Truth or Fail.
One of our panelists has picked three science facts for our education and enjoyment, but two of those are fake.
So you didn't really pick them.
You just created them out of your head.
The other panelists have to figure out either by deduction or wild guess which is the true fact.
And if we get it right, we get the Sam Buck.
If not, Sam gets the Sam Buck because Sam is doing truth or fail.
Magnets, frankly, seem pretty miraculous.
Am I right?
So it's not really a big surprise that many people throughout history
have believed them to have healing or spiritual powers.
This belief has led to a variety of inventions claiming to cure people
of any ailment you can think of, physical, mental, anything magnet magic so these are all real quote inventions but only one of them actually
use magnets so which was it number one a large console filled with knobs and dials sort of like
an electric organ which sold for home use in the 1960s and cost thirty five hundred dollars
that claimed to use magnetic fields to analyze and diagnose blood samples and then you could Ooh, Theranos.
Two, yeah. would disrupt communication between the left and right side of your brain, allowing the creative right side to take control,
which allowed users to perceive an otherworldly presence that was said to be God.
Or three, a magnet-lined water jug sold in the early 1900s
that claimed to refresh water by pulling toxin and other undesirable elements from it.
The makers claimed that it would cure flatulence, senility, arthritis, and more.
Okay, so we've got three things here.
Things that inventions, quote, inventions.
Well, I guess they were inventions.
They just didn't work.
Right.
At least ideas.
Something from the 1960s that used magnetic fields to analyze your blood sample and then send you a magnetic field to cure you.
Two, a helmet that separated your brain hemispheres
this was in the early 2000s that let you see god or in the early 1900s a magnet lined water jug
that pulled out toxins and cured your flatulence magnets have kind of always been around so like
like what like was there a big peak in magnet crazes?
But I think now I wouldn't be surprised if there was a magnet-lined water bottle.
Because we're always sort of like waving our hands over water and being like, things happened!
Water especially right now for some reason.
Like, let's find a way to make this more expensive and exclusive.
Right. We were fooled by Tom Brady's water.
Fake water.
It was pants! It was pants.
It was pants instead.
There are quartz water bottles with crystals inside of them.
That's cool.
Love a crystal.
I believe that.
That makes sense.
Okay, I'm going to say the brain helmet because I'm just going to take a stab about it.
Just because it's like your brain has electricity, so I can assume that putting magnets near it, it's like, it's not bad, it's good.
Right.
electricity so i can assume that putting magnets near it's like it's not bad it's good right and like and like i was alive then but i'd still forget about it because what a boring thing to
have happen and also the early 2000s were a busy time for me now i think both of you might know
something no no i'd be i would i would no well i guess i wouldn't say but i but no i would have
been more cryptic.
I think I would have made you guess first.
I make other people guess first.
That's often what I do when I know, is I make the other people guess first.
But then I'm usually wrong, so nothing matters.
Indeed.
Well, I'm going to go with the blood magnet.
Blood magnet for Stefan.
Sari?
Brain magnet.
Brain magnet.
I'm going to go with brain magnet too.
It was brain magnet.
Yeah!
You bastards. I quit. I'm not doing the show brain magnet too. It was brain magnet. Yeah. You bastards.
I quit.
I'm not doing the show anymore.
You got a point.
Yeah, that's true.
Okay.
Maybe Stefan won't get any points this episode.
And then I'll be happy.
Wow.
So I'll start with the real one.
The God Machine is what it was called.
It seems to have started as a pretty like normal experiment
to study a link between forms of epilepsy and religious visions,
quote religious visions.
So like near-death experiences, things like that,
that would make you see like the tunnel to heaven or something.
So people with temporal lobe epilepsy seem to frequently report
the feeling of not being alone while having a seizure.
So this device was supposed to
replicate like a safer version of that but in tests the researchers reported that 80 percent
of subjects felt an unexplained presence nearby but there are a lot of other things a lot of other
experiments that couldn't replicate this at all and there was a placebo experiment that did
replicate it so you, you know.
But now they sell, some of the people who did these experiments sell consumer versions for meditation and for helping you see God.
But they're also supposed to be able to change your emotional state, like with the push of a button.
I can change my emotional state with the push of a button already.
It's called Twitter.
Oh.
Many things flash
through my mind.
None of them is Twitter.
And I can
imagine people around me
if I just turn off all the lights in my house
and something creaks that I'm like,
that's it, it's a murderer.
That's you changing your emotional state.
Or God. Or God, yeah. I guess I always assume It's a murderer. That's you changing your emotional state. Or God. Or God. Yeah, I guess I always assume it's a murderer.
The large console with knobs was a consumer thing called the electometabograph,
which was like a home appliance that you would have in your house,
and you would put your blood in it,
and it would give you a diagnosis by blinking different lights on the front
that was like kidney, bad bad or something like that and then you it was a radio so you would tune it to a
frequency that would shoot healing waves into you but the fda caught wind of it opened it up and
there wasn't anything in it except for a blinking light there wasn't even a radio not even a radio
inside but they sold a ton of them i think i don't think they ever even really found out who was doing it.
And then the water jug was a jug lined with uranium called the Revigorator.
It would irradiate your water and bring back the, quote, lost element of original freshness, radioactivity.
Oh.
What is called the Revigorator?
Uh-huh.
I like that.
Yes.
That's very good.
I really, like, I would totally buy a Revigorator uh-huh i like that yes that's very good i really like i would totally buy a revigorator yeah i just if it didn't have any uranium you're in luck because you can still buy
one that has uranium that still works so still trademarked because you could just make the
revigorator water bottle yeah put whatever you want crystals go to scishow.com where we're now
selling the revigorator a blinking light like
that could be what's in there it could be a water bottle with a blinking light yeah and it could
just be like yeah blinked on it would be done it would just say done so they did some studies with
these jugs that still have working uranium oh yeah and they leach a ton of arsenic and lead
into the water.
Because I guess they were just not very well made.
And they also release enough radiation to be like almost double the EPA suggested level
of exposure.
Oh, so it's like, it's not like a water bottle.
It's not personal.
It's like...
No, you have it in your house for your whole family to drink out of.
Reinvigorate your whole family.
Right.
No, it's called the Revigator, boy.
Oh, the revigator boy oh the revigator well
not a real word
either way
no
well now we're definitely
in the clear for revigorator
yeah
well
Sam thank you for
the wonderful facts
thanks for guessing right
I haven't made a kind of
bullshit one
so that I could get
some easy points
didn't even work
next up
we're gonna take a short break.
Then, the fact off.
Welcome back, everybody.
Sam Buck total.
Sari's got one.
Sam's got one.
Stefan's got none.
I've got two because of my good, good poem that I am so proud of.
You got to mail it to the ICP, though.
What I will say is that song, ultimately, like, there's a little bit of, like, antagonism towards science.
But mostly it's a song about, like, appreciating how beautiful and weird the world is i like that they like call out dirt as a miracle it's like yeah i think that we don't recognize that dirt is really wonderful and complex and it does show like a certain like
reflection and way of thinking about things yeah that i appreciate i appreciate it anyway now it's
time for the fact off two panelists have brought science facts to blow the other panelists' minds.
And we each have a Sandbuck to award to the one that we like the most.
And we're going to choose whether Stefan or Sari goes first with this trivia question.
The temperature at which magnets lose their permanent magnetic properties is called the Curie temperature.
That's the only thing I knew.
Which Curie is it named Curie temperature. That's the only thing I knew. Which Curie is it named
for? Oh.
I can give you multiple choice if you don't
know. Murray. That's the
only Curie that I know. Okay, well
then it's not that. So the ones
you have left are Eve,
Irene, or Pierre.
Three, two, one.
Pierre. Oh, crap.
They're both right. Oh. Can you guess what the temperature is yeah oh it's
different for every for every thing but great so what's the curate temperature of gadolinium
in kelvin oh kelvin
it's not going to increase or decrease the odds of getting it right. 352. That is a temperature that exists.
Yes.
Good job.
565.
293.
Ooh.
I don't know.
Gadolinium is a weak one.
Nickels, for example, is 627.
Okay.
Well, how much Kelvin is that?
Is that like hot as the sun or what?
No.
293 is like cold.
Zero Kelvin is absolute zero.
So gadolinium's Curie point is 67 degrees Fahrenheit.
So you were closer, Stefan.
Well, Terry, you're up.
Oh.
Okay.
The Earth has a magnetic field generated by the sloshing core.
Yeah.
Or the molten stuff around the core.
And that magnetic field changes.
and that magnetic field changes,
and the Earth's North Magnetic Pole,
where magnetic compasses point north,
is not the same place as the geographic North Pole.
And in fact, the North Magnetic Pole was first formally described in 1831,
but it's been on the move and has traveled over 2,250 kilometers,
or 1,400 miles, since then. In the past couple decades, it's been traveling at a rate of around 55 kilometers or 34 miles per year and now at around 40 kilometers or 24 miles per year.
And it's drifting from over Canada towards Siberia and Russia. And that's like not insignificant at
all. That's a lot. And so the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, NOAA,
works with a lot of data and groups to maintain a tool called the World Magnetic Model, or WMM, that gets updated every five years. And so 2020 is out now.
You can go look at it. To help everything that uses the magnetic field from compasses to maps
to GPS services and other electronic navigation tools. And critically, airplanes and airports
fall under this umbrella and use the WMM
because planes have to know where they're flying and they use the magnetic field to help them
navigate. And so without going into too much detail, runways have numerical names from 1 to 36
to indicate the cardinal direction rounded to the nearest 10 degrees. So 180 degrees becomes 18,
360 degrees becomes 36, 18 is the North Magn pole and 36 is the South magnetic pole and everything's like relative to that.
So in 2009, the Fairbanks International Airport in Alaska had to rename their runway 1L19R to 1L or 2L20R, I think, or 1L20R.
Had to rename their runway because magnetic north shifted and they'll have to do so again in 2033
as predicted by these models so that means replacing all the signage repainting pilots
have to relearn can't they just do those ones where you can switch out the numbers and letters
i mean you don't have to the ground too and that's because when the magnetic field gets
messed up over time or even like there have been instances with where it gets messed up locally
over airports.
It can really mess with navigation
and takeoff and landing of planes
so they can like get near misses to each other
or they can just be like headed in the wrong direction,
which is an uncertainty you don't want to introduce
for already very mathematically complicated system.
So as magnetic field changes,
we have to change all our airports.
Do they monitor the magnetic field or whatever
around like every airport just in case something goes wild or so the world magnetic model models
it everywhere in the world using data and so you can point you can put in whatever coordinates you
want and know what the magnetic field is doing at that point on earth which is very cool stefan can you beat drifting runway magnetic fields causing havoc
to air travelers let's find out so fluids don't normally react to magnetic fields but ferrofluids
when exposed to magnetic fields form spiky hedgehog formations have you all seen these yeah
so the way that ferrofluids work is that you have like a base
fluid which could be water could be other things and you mix in small magnetic particles and then
to keep those particles suspended in the liquid you have to coat them with a surfactant and so
like one side of the surfactant is attracted to the particle so it coats them all then the other
side is attracted to the water or whatever the solvent is and that keeps them
suspended and prevents them from clumping together so then you get this liquid that has weird
magnetic properties yeah apparently most commonly these days they use ferrofluids for speakers oh i
thought they just used them to look at no they're used in manufacturing for different things but
speakers is the most common thing so it like cools cools the voice coil and also dampens some of the vibration in those,
which I thought was a cool thing that I didn't know.
But one potential application for these fluids
is as a thruster for satellites.
Smaller satellites are becoming more common
and that's small satellites is anything
under 1100 pounds apparently,
which still seems pretty big,
but I guess some satellites are pretty heavy.
And a lot of the technology for satellites has shrunk, like the cameras and GPS systems and all
that stuff. So they've been able to be much smaller, but it's harder to make small propulsion
systems so that they can relocate themselves in low Earth orbit or adjust which direction
they're looking. One of the promising kinds of propulsion
that i think has been used is electrospray propulsion and for that they have you have
like maybe a hundred or so of these tiny needles and then you have like an ionic fuel and you apply
electricity to it and then it shoots this fuel out in a little stream of particles and that pushes
the satellite but those systems are kind of expensive to make and they're apparently pretty fragile,
so they break easily. So this team at Michigan Technological University has been working on
an ion thruster using ferrofluids. And so it's an ionic ferrofluid. And when they apply the
magnetic field, they get all the little spiky spikes. And then when they apply an electric field on top of that each needle can start
spraying little jets of ions which are the particles that make up the ferrofluid so the
ferrofluid when these fields are applied self-assembles into the thruster and then is also
the fuel for the thruster which is why this becomes its own thruster yeah and if you like smash it
with a hammer,
it just reforms,
I guess based on the magnetic field lines.
It's just T-1000 over here.
It's T-1000 thrusters. All those aliens with hammers out there
switching off our satellites.
We're going to get them.
We've got one over on them, finally.
Can we make other things that reform like that
so that we can hit more things with hammers
and have them reform?
Like my bones?
Yeah.
I guess it comes down to like how
carefully you can control the shape of a
magnetic field. Yeah. Which you can't
do anything with a magnetic field. What if
I drank a ferrofluid? Ferrofluid
enemas and then you use a magnet
to just spit all out.
Describe yourself out.
Yeah. Oh yeah, like the little fish tank magnet?
So, like, over your belly, back and forth.
This is great.
Oh, God, I hate it so much.
Okay.
Sam and I have to decide which of these facts
we want to give our point to.
Three, two, one.
Stefan.
Oh.
I expected that.
Brutal.
I'm cleaning house.
I shouldn't have even given you a dang point.
Yeah, I thought for sure Sam was going to go for Sari because...
I'm strictly bound by my honor code.
I'm devoted to truth and justice.
Thank you.
Thank you for being devoted to truth and justice.
You're welcome.
Now it's time for Ask the Science Couch.
We've got some listener questions for our couch of finely honed scientific minds.
This question comes from at Lux in the Light.
Is it actually possible for something to make
magnets stop working
like in Stranger Things?
I just got spoiled on
Stranger Things just this very
moment. So I guess
at some point, for some reason, all
magnets stop working?
So from the article I read,
have you actually seen season three?
I've seen it.
It basically boils down to
at some point,
for some reason,
this happens,
and I don't remember
the answer or anything,
but they're just at their house,
and then all the magnets
fall off their fridge.
Oh, okay.
So it's very localized.
Like, magnets just fall off a fridge.
Yeah.
Well, I mean,
what could happen is
if you have a big magnetic field
that comes through,
you could,
the magnets wouldn't necessarily
be permanently demagnetized, but you could definitely push them off the fridge to like counteract the effect.
And that would be a creepy thing to have happen.
Yeah, I mean, that's like kind of it.
mess with the magnetic field because if you apply heat to a magnet then the alignment of particles gets misaligned because heat is just like movement energy the way that they explained it in the show
according to a wired article from someone who actually watched it winona rider was like oh
no my fridge magnets fell on the floor and she found the science teacher and he was like I can tell you about this
the science teacher who's a beloved character from season one
but she like read some books
about physics and then talked to him and he
was like look at this thing called a
solenoid which is a
cylindrical coil of wire
that can generate a magnetic field so basically like
an electromagnet without the
thing inside and so it can also
create a static magnetic field.
Then, like, the science in the show gets a little wibbly, I think,
where he was like, if someone created a giant version of this,
then anything could happen.
Yeah, we've surrounded the entire community with a solenoid
and just, like, pumped a lot of electrons through it.
I think that is actually what it was.
It was the mall or something.
I don't know so like the thing that you can do is disrupt the magnetic field somehow so i don't
think like applying a constant magnetic field to the magnets on the fridge would necessarily
mess them up completely it'd have to be like an alternating current if you if you put in an
alternating current then that also creates like a changing intensity magnetic field.
And that could like mess with the alignment of the particles enough
to demagnetize something.
Is that something that can happen?
Yes.
If you did it on purpose?
If you did it on purpose, yeah.
If the magnetic object has what are known as deformable domains, so like iron or steel or other things, like if you magnetize a nail, you can demagnetize it.
Things like neodymium are much stronger magnets.
And so I think that alignment is more locked into place.
And so for that, you need a more extreme thing than like an alternating magnetic field to scramble it.
You need like a
really really high temperature or something that will actually disrupt its pretty stable structure
the more like temporarily magnetic something is the easier it is to disrupt the magnetic field so
like if you magnetize a nail you can like hit it with a hammer and disrupt it because that is enough
force to mess with the alignment just so many things with hammers today.
So wait, now, the other day a fridge magnet fell on my phone and I got scared.
Is that something I should still be scared about?
No, I don't have to worry about that so much.
A really powerful magnet on a hard drive, definitely be worried about.
Okay.
It feels like something that kids in the early 2000s and the 90s and stuff,
magnets should be nowhere near your personal computer.
Yep.
Okay.
Also, solid state is a totally different technology we use mostly now.
But I still wouldn't want a big, strong magnet around my electric equipment.
Okay.
That's it.
I don't think, don't worry about it.
Don't worry about it.
Don't worry about magnets.
Let them be.
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But one more thing.
Fecal incontinence happens where patients can't control some part of their anus and flow of poop anymore.
Yeah, that's one of the main things I want to avoid in my life.
Well, so one solution if this happens to you is a magnetic anal sphincter with magnetic titanium beads on a titanium string.
It's implanted in myself?
Yes, that keep the opening closed unless you push poop through it.
The procedure, according to this, only takes about 45 minutes
and one overnight hospital stay.
So very minimally invasive surgery.
That's awesome.
Yeah, apparently it's just as good as...
Pooping.
Pooping?
Yeah, and there's something else, some other sphincter replacement.
Can I get a different animal sphincter replacement can i get a
can i get a different animal sphincter oh i want a pig butt cow butt no i want little poops
is that how it works is that how i can get little poops i need a really tiny butthole you should
get a wombat butthole then yeah you know the square poop oh square poops okay no i want to
i want to be like uh I want it to be like
that attachment on the
Play-Doh machine where
you get a bunch of little spaghetti strings.
And you're like, today I feel like
stars.
I want rigatoni today.
Oh no.