That was so well made that it took me a while to realize where the edits were. The seamless blending of slow and fast motion is superb.
I really enjoy watching The Slow Mo Guys on YouTube, but this video actually scratches a different itch for me. The Guys are almost clinical in their videos, whereas this takes a more artistic approach. Love it; well done.
I was really happy when Gav from the Slow Mo Guys was finally able to capture the shockwave of glass breaking a couple of weeks ago. Until recently, it was impossible for them to see because it happens so dang fast.
Ah, TikTok's algorithm brought me this one the other day as I was falling asleep swiping between kitten, having warm and fuzzy feelings. I recall having my sleepiness instantly evaporating.
There's something fascinating about how the brain can instantly switch on to full attention when intrigued. The way that the videos are composed completely dismantles the reality as nothing acts as the way you expect it should act, you can even feel in your body as your brain tries to adjust in this new reality. It's like seen a slo-mo for the first time, again.
The video that I was presented is the one at 0:53 on this one. The continuous motion of his hand with the clock captures your sense of progress over time as it is the only thing that works as expected. That itself is cool but as he moves his hand beyond the point of re-assembly of the broken bottle, the bottle breaks in a different way and this conflicts with your intuition on the way the world works even if you are slo-mo junkie that is used to see things decomposing in million pieces and re-composing to full shape...
As his hand passes the point zero, it feels like the bottle breaks again because he moved the time too much and this leads to feel the time as a rigid physical object due to the way the bottle breaks.
Wow, breaking the both parts of the milk bottle both forwards and backwards in time was awesome.
I remember going through backwards videos in thermodynamics class, because the interesting thing about reality is that it has charge, parity, and time reversal symmetry[0].
“ The implication of CPT symmetry is that a "mirror-image" of our universe — with all objects having their positions reflected through an arbitrary point (corresponding to a parity inversion), all momenta reversed (corresponding to a time inversion) and with all matter replaced by antimatter (corresponding to a charge inversion) — would evolve under exactly our physical laws. The CPT transformation turns our universe into its "mirror image" and vice versa. CPT symmetry is recognized to be a fundamental property of physical laws.”
This is a really interesting camera. A Phantom high-speed camera is going to set you back between $30k and $100k and aren’t always affordable depending in academia. They’re great cameras, very robust and I’ve had good experience with the company.
For five grand however you get a lot of potential to get good research done in a budget, heck you could even buy a few of them and mount them on something moving since they are battery powered.
I bought the similar FPS1000 camera a few years ago and it had a lot of issues. It was really buggy and poorly built. The Kronos looks a lot better.
I know my Samsung phone can do 960 fps. But its almost useless without some way of triggering it at the right moment. Anyone play with their phone and get good results.
Yes, with today's technology these kinds of effects are within reach of amateur film makers. The real challenge, of course, is to make interactive effects.
I really enjoy watching The Slow Mo Guys on YouTube, but this video actually scratches a different itch for me. The Guys are almost clinical in their videos, whereas this takes a more artistic approach. Love it; well done.