StarTalk Radio

Things You Thought You Knew – Force, Heat, & Speed

41 min
Nov 18, 20255 months ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

Neil deGrasse Tyson explains the physics distinctions between commonly confused concepts: force vs. pressure, heat vs. temperature, and speed vs. acceleration. Using everyday examples like knife sharpness, tornadoes, and car performance, he demonstrates how these precise definitions manifest in real-world phenomena and why understanding them matters for science literacy.

Insights
  • Pressure is force divided by area—reducing contact area increases pressure, explaining why sharp knives cut better and why snowshoes prevent sinking
  • Heat and temperature are fundamentally different: temperature is average molecular kinetic energy, while heat is the total energy sum, meaning a cup of coffee can be hotter than the ocean but contain far less heat
  • Humans don't perceive speed itself; we perceive acceleration and changes in direction, which is why constant-velocity motion feels imperceptible despite traveling at 800+ mph due to Earth's rotation
  • Jerk—the rate of change of acceleration—causes musculoskeletal damage in accidents, not acceleration itself, explaining why sudden impacts are dangerous even at moderate speeds
  • Air conditioning and heat pumps work by moving heat regardless of temperature, demonstrating that heat exists at any temperature above absolute zero
Trends
Physics education gap: widespread public confusion between force/pressure, heat/temperature, and speed/acceleration despite their critical real-world applicationsClimate science communication challenge: public underestimates ocean heat absorption due to misunderstanding heat vs. temperature distinctionAutomotive marketing emphasis on acceleration metrics (0-60 times) over top speed reflects consumer preference for jerk and acceleration sensationEngineering design philosophy: luxury vehicles prioritize smooth acceleration to minimize jerk perception, while sports cars emphasize rigid suspension to maximize acceleration feedbackSafety engineering focus: accident prevention increasingly targets jerk reduction rather than acceleration limitation in vehicle design
Topics
Force and Newton's Laws of MotionPressure and area relationshipsHeat vs. temperature distinctionMolecular kinetic energy and vibrationEvaporation and molecular escape velocityClimate change and ocean heat absorptionHeat pumps and reverse heat pump technologySpeed, velocity, and acceleration physicsJerk and musculoskeletal injury mechanicsTornado pressure dynamics and structural failureKnife sharpness and pressure applicationEarth's rotational velocityOrbital mechanics and planetary motionAir conditioning thermodynamicsVehicle acceleration and suspension design
Companies
Anthropic
Claude AI platform sponsor; positioned as thinking partner for problem-solving without ad interference
People
Neil deGrasse Tyson
Host and primary educator explaining physics concepts and distinctions throughout the episode
Isaac Newton
Referenced for formulating the foundational equation F=ma relating force, mass, and acceleration
Quotes
"Science isn't about rushing to conclusions. It's about sitting with the uncertainty until it starts to make sense."
Claude (Anthropic) ad readOpening
"Pressure is force divided by area. If you have a small number in the denominator of a fraction, the value of that goes higher."
Neil deGrasse TysonPressure segment
"Your cup of coffee in the morning at 210 degrees Fahrenheit is hotter than the ocean. But the ocean has more heat."
Neil deGrasse TysonHeat vs. temperature segment
"When you are moving at constant speed, your body has no idea you're moving at any speed at all. It's only when your speed changes that you get some sense of motion."
Neil deGrasse TysonSpeed vs. acceleration segment
"It's the ground. If there were no ground, you'd be fine. It's the jerk that kills you, not the fall."
Neil deGrasse TysonJerk discussion
Full Transcript
Startup radio is supported by Claude from Anthropic. Science isn't about rushing to conclusions. It's about sitting with the uncertainty until it starts to make sense. Claude is the AI built for that kind of thinking, and Anthropic committed to not running ads in Claude. So when you're chasing down an idea, there's nothing pulling you towards someone else's agenda. Try Claude for free at claude.ai slash startup and see why problem solvers choose Claude as their thinking partner. This podcast is brought to you by hotels.com. Make your next trip work for you. Hotel.com's new Save Your Way feature lets you choose between instant savings now or banking rewards for later. It's a flexible rewards program that puts you in control with no confusing math or blackout dates. Book now at hotels.com. Save Your Way is available to loyalty members in the US and UK on hotels with member prices. Are the terms of supply see sight for details. Coming up on StarTalk, it's another things you thought you knew episode. This time we dig into force versus pressure, heat versus temperature, and speed versus acceleration. Check it out. Welcome to StarTalk, your place in the universe where science and pop culture collide. StarTalk begins right now. I got more explaining to do. You got some explaining to do. Lucy. So here it is. Today I want to talk about force and pressure. Gotcha. Okay. So I'm not talking about sort of emotional pressure. Okay. That's what I'm talking about. Right. Right. You know, my job has gotten me under so much pressure. I'm talking about physics pressure and physics force. All right. By the way, another way we use those words in everyday life, we say, how much force are you showing on the battlefield? So that's another cultural usage of those two terms. Each of those words has a precise definition in physics. Not to mention space force. Yes, that's in there too. Okay. They don't call it space pressure. No, this is space force. So a force is what you think it is. Right. You push on something and you create a force that might set it into motion. Okay. And if it's something that doesn't move, but it's still fragile, you put enough force on it, you might break it. Nice. Yeah. Okay. So forces make things happen. And when we say happen, we mean something changes about the object. Typically, it's set into motion. And Isaac Newton first wrote down an equation about this. Okay. He said force equal equals the mass of the object times the acceleration it'll get if you put that force on that object. Gotcha. Okay. So you use that formula. You say, well, here's an object, I'm going to put a certain amount of force. And it has to be like a net force. So in other words, if you put a force exactly opposite mine, then the forces cancel and then there's no net force, there's nothing accelerate. Right. So if everything is in balance, you can have very high forces operating, but nothing's going to happen. Right. But if there's a slight imbalance, then there will be motion. And didn't long ago we talk about this like at the gym, why is it that the person spotting for someone else does not have to be as muscle bound as the person lifting the weights? Have you ever thought about that? Every time I go to the gym. Okay. No, I'm just saying. Somebody will say, Hey, man, give me a spot. And it's always a dude who's eight times bigger than I am. And he's lifting on a building. He's actually lifting a building. And just like, and just stand there in case I drop it. Right. And he goes, Hey, buddy, can you give me a spot? And I'm just like, no, what am I supposed to do when you're lifting? Like, you're struggling. Not only if you're struggling and there's a point where you can't lift it anymore. You want me to come help you? Right. You want me to then take over. Okay. Here's why that works. Okay. Because if all forces are balanced, then any force will move it. No matter how small. So watch what happens. So I'm there. I'm on the bench. Bench. Disadbench press typically, right? Because the weight is above the person's neck. Correct. So this is dangerous. You don't need a spotter if you do a bent over sort of rowing lift. No, because you can just drop the weight. It's no big deal. It's no big deal. It's when it's over your windpipe. It's like, Hey, Chuck, can you spot me? And I'm like, Hey, man, you want to die. You get my skinny ass to prevent you from dying. So watch. So here I am. I'm lifting and that's getting harder and harder. All right. And now there's a point where I get it halfway and I can't get it any further. And I say, Chuck, help me out here. In that moment, my upward force equals the downward force of those weights and right force on earth from gravity is called your weight. So the weight equals the force of pushing up on it. If they're equal, now the thing is just stopped moving. Okay. It has stopped moving. So now you come along and say, here you go. And then you lift and you lift. You could probably use one hand to do this. You lift it back up onto the rack because the forces were balanced. Whereas previously, the person's force was greater than the weight of the weights, right? And so if I had greater arm in control here, and I can push the thing away from earth, away from earth's urges to try to bring it back when we're in balance, then you break that tie basically and put it over the hump. That's why that works. That's very cool. Okay. So we're teaming up on the weights basically. You're teaming up, right. And it doesn't make a difference how strong I am. I could take two fingers and just whatever little bit I'm doing. Now you're provided, provided that he's not losing that battle. Okay. If the weight is on its way down, you're going to need, it's not balanced. You have to counteract that. Right. And then put in a little more to get the thing back up to the, to the stack. And that's when I stand over top of him and go, sorry, man, you're going to die. You sound like this has happened before. All right. So just get a sense of what forces are. Okay. That's all. And oh, so with regard to acceleration, if there's a net force, then the objects motion will continue to increase in speed. You have an acceleration. All right. So there you have it. One last thing, just in detail. If all forces are balanced, it can still be in motion. It just won't be accelerating. All right. Okay. So you can have no motion or constant motion. If there's a net force, it will accelerate. That's the point that's going on here. All right. So you're in your car and your foot is on the accelerator pedal, and you're sticking to 60 miles an hour, 55 miles an hour. Well, what does it mean if your foot is on the accelerator pedal, but you're not increasing in speed, you're not accelerating. Oh, well, the force the accelerator pedal is trying to put in the car is exactly balanced by the friction of the tires on the road and the air resistance. All of that is balanced. And you're maintaining constant speed. If you want to take it out of balance, you press the pedal even harder to overcome that balance. And now you can pass the car on the right by accelerating up to 70. You pass them and then you slow back down again. So that's what's going on with force. And you everybody learns this in like physics 101, the first 10 days. Okay. So now what is pressure? Pressure is when you have been dating for four years and she goes, what are we doing here? Seriously, how many times can I take you home for Thanksgiving and explain to my parents? You know, we're not ready yet. What's I mean, what is that pressure? You tell me that's pressure. Okay, that's not the kind of pressure I'm talking about. Okay. Okay. Okay. That's dating pressure. How about that? Right. So we're talking about physics pressure. So pressure intimately needs force to be what it is, but it's not the same thing. Uh-oh. Okay. Okay. It's not the same thing. So if you want to find out what it is, you got to look at the equation for pressure. Okay. Oh, yeah. Okay. Have you ever seen the equation for pressure? I don't think I have. All right. Let me, before I get to that, let me tell you a few things that are affected by pressure. For example, your knife set, how sharp are your knives? That is all about pressure. All about pressure. Okay. Uh, if you, are you going to fall through the ice on that pond as you walk across it? That's all about pressure and stupidity. That's stupidity. Right. All right. So let's talk about this. Here you go. Pressure is force divided by area. Oh, okay. And I didn't even know that equation, but that makes perfect sense. It makes perfect sense. So watch, so watch. So if I'm walking out onto a frozen pond and I don't want to fall through, if I have tiny itty bitty ass feet, then the area of the bottom of my feet is small. But what happens if you have a small number in the denominator of a fraction? The value of that goes higher. Right. So if pressure is forced divided by area and that area gets smaller and smaller, the pressure gets higher and you punch through that ice and you die. You need clown shoes. You need clown shoes. Get the biggest ass shoes you can find. So that force is spread over the largest area possible. So when you have a big area, the force divided by a big area makes a low pressure. And so with low pressure, now you can get across the ice without sinking through, proves your chances of not breaking the ice. This is what snow shoes are. What are snow shoes? They're like the, you know, the mountain man snow equivalent of clown shoes. All right. Yeah. Because the snow shoe is this big, it's like a big net. And it attaches to the bottom of your feet. And when you walk on it, your body weight is now spread over a larger area. And you don't plunge down through deep snow. You still sink a little bit, but not as much as you would have. And then you can actually walk. Have you ever seen the width of the paws of a polar bear? They're huge. Oh my God. It's like, oh my God. Because there's some big mofos and they don't want to sink through the snow. Okay. They spent a lot of their time on ice, but this matters. Okay. And so what about your knives? When you go to cut something, you apply a force. How do you make that force as effective as possible to cut? You want the lowest possible area over which you're applying that force so that you have the highest possible pressure. Okay. You get pressure for free. So when you, so what, what is a dull knife? You look at it under a microscope. It's, it's a, it's all chewed up. It's flat. It's thick. So your pressure, let's say you put 10 pounds of pressure on it is spread over this long area over the length of the blade. And you try to cut something with it, with it, and you mangle the food. You have to press even harder to get it through. A perfectly sharpened blade. What's the area of a blade edge? Tell me that. The area of a sharpened blade edge. It is so tiny that even the mildest force of that knife will cut through the food. And that's why chefs are always sharpened in their knives because they want to increase the pressure on their food because they don't want to have to increase their force to get the pressure they want. They're reducing the area to get the pressure they want. Sweet. So this is, this is force versus pressure. And I don't know how many people internalize this, feel it, think about it. But this distinction between force and pressure manifests everywhere, everywhere. And by the way, it's why a tornado can explode your house. Wow. Okay. You say, oh, because the wind is high. Here's what's happening. All right. It's very low pressure in the middle of a tornado. Okay. Really, really low pressure. And inside your house, you have slightly higher pressure than that tornado. Now, suppose that pressure difference is like one pound per square inch difference, let's say, okay, so it might be a little high for this example, like a tenth of a pound per square inch, I don't care, a tenth of a pound. Okay. So inside the house, the air has not equilibrated with the outside of the house yet. The tornado comes, it sits on your house. Oh, my gosh, every square inch of your wall is feeling a tenth of a pound pressing outward. So 10 square inches feels how much? 100. No, it's a tenth of a pound. So one square inches is a pound. Okay. 100 square inches is just 10 inches by 10 inches. That's 10 pounds. Right. Your wall is probably bigger than 10 inches by 10 inches square. Yeah. Keep adding this up. And that pressure builds on top of it. You get a thousand pounds of pressure. Oh my god, that's more than the Kool-Aid guy actually exerts it through a wall to say, oh yeah. So what I didn't say it right. So the, it's thousands of pounds of total force spread across that wall, but the whole wall is only built to handle you leaning on it or to hold up the house. It's not enough to prevent the tornado from exploding your house and all the walls blow out. Take a look at video footage of homes. They don't collapse. No, they're turned into matchsticks. That's matchsticks and they explode outwards. That is pressure at its most deadly. Wow. And so, you know, there you have it. Now see, this is what I'm talking about when I say plot twist. No one would ever think that you just talk about force and pressure and we end up right here. That's right. And by the way, it's how bombs work. What is a bomb? It sets a pressure wave, high temperature expansion of the air because there's some, like an explosion is a very high temperature abrupt and set device, right? So it happens, has to happen rapidly so that it's like a bullet firing. It's a rapid expansion of gas, which shoves the bullet out. But if it's a bomb, there's no bullet. It's just the expanding air. Right. Sometimes you can put in shrapnel, but air will do this. And the expanding air comes out and now you have air pressure too high on one side of the wall versus the other and that'll blow the wall inward rather than outward. Or if the bomb is inside the house, it'll blow the house up instead of it. Right. So this is pressure on the wall, spread over the area. And by the way, if all of that force were in one spot, it would just puncture a hole through the wall. Right. That's so cool. Oh my God. So why can't we find a way? Everybody's always trying to figure out a way to predict where a tornado will go, which is almost impossible. Why not just have like a tornado airbag? Well, you would die. No, I was going to say, Chuck, Chuck, Chuck, you don't need tools to tell you where the freaking tornado is. Just look. That's true. You try to see airbags exploding. Oh, there must be a tornado somewhere here. Right. Exactly. I'm overthinking. You're overthinking that one. I'm overthinking. Overthinking. Yeah. Okay, Chuck, we're done there. That's pressure versus force. That's very cool. Not to mention very, very cool song. Under pressure. Oh yeah, yeah. The Queen. Yeah, very good. Very good. Startup radio is supported by Claude from Anthropic. Science isn't about rushing to conclusions. It's about sitting with the uncertainty until it starts to make sense. Claude is the AI built for that kind of thinking and Anthropic committed to not running ads in Claude. So when you're chasing down an idea, there's nothing pulling you towards someone else's agenda. Try Claude for free at Claude.ai slash start up and see why problem solvers choose Claude as their thinking partner. T-Mobile 5G Home Internet has some big news you should know about. They now have the fastest 5G Home Internet, according to the experts at Euclid Speed Test. All right, so let's unpack that. It means photo backups happen faster. Streaming a documentary doesn't stall halfway through. What's really notable is that the jump in speed doesn't come with added complexity. Setup is simple. Plug it in and you're online in less than 15 minutes and the value side of the equation holds two. With a plan price that's backed by a five year price guarantee. So if you want the fastest 5G Home Internet with a simple setup and savings that stick, get T-Mobile 5G Home Internet. And if you don't want that, wait a minute, why wouldn't you want that? Just visit t-mobile.com slash home internet to check availability today. Price guarantee exclusions like taxes and fees apply. Fastest based on Euclid Speed Test intelligence data second half 2025. All rights reserved. A thoughtfully built wardrobe comes down to pieces that mix well and last. That's where Quint shines. Premium fabrics, considered design and everyday essentials that feel effortless to wear and dependable even as the seasons change. Quint has the everyday essentials you'll love with quality that lasts. Lightweight cashmere sweaters, short sleeve Mongolian cashmere polos, linen bottoms and shorts. Did you say short sleeve Mongolian cashmere polos because I don't have one of those and that's going to be my next Quint's edition. These are versatile pieces that make a wardrobe actually work season to season. You've heard me talk about all the pieces I own from Quint and you just heard the next piece that I'm about to buy. So you can do the same. I mean, if you want to look good, wear quality clothing that lasts. I mean, if not, what is wrong with you? If not, right now go to quint.com slash star talk for free shipping and 365 day returns. That's a full year to wear it and love it and you will. Quite as a skip, I've never returned. One thing I've ever bought now available in Canada to don't keep settling for clothes that don't last. Go to q in ce.com slash star talk for free shipping and 365 day returns quints.com slash star talk. Hey, this is Kevin the Somalia and I support star talk on patreon. You're listening to star talk with Neil deGrasse Tyson. It's a source of no end of misconception in our world in civilization. Yeah, yeah. So that's a big one. Okay. All right. And it's the difference between heat and temperature. They are not the same thing. Okay. So you have already, you're right, because if you say that this is a source of misunderstanding, then I am the source. Because guess what? Heat and temperature. I mean, it's the same damn thing. Okay. So it's the same to me. I will start off. I hate starting off this way, but I will. I'll start off defining them from the point of view of a physicist. Okay. All right. All right. So the temperature of a thing is the average kinetic energy of its vibrating molecules. Okay. All right. So you have a thing that is of a temperature. You go, you look in close. All the molecules are if they're atoms, it could be atomic. They're all vibrating. Right. They're writing fast. They're writing slowly. Okay. You put a thermometer in there. That vibration gets communicated to the thermometer. The thermometer reads a temperature. There's the average kinetic energy, the average energy of motion of the vibrating particles, the average, which means a single particle has no temperature. Okay. Okay. Wait a minute. A single particle. That's right. There's no, this doesn't meet right. So temperature is a macroscopic thing that you obtain from a liquid, a solid, a gas. It doesn't matter. Okay. That's temperature. Okay. Okay. So you heat it up some more. You get higher temperature. Oh, by the way, there's a range of which they vibrate. Some vibrate slowly. Some vibrate quickly. It's the average that's the temperature. Let me say that another way. At a given temperature, there's like the average, which is where most of them are kind of vibrating. And then there's some off at the tail. Some are vibrating slowly. Some are vibrating quickly. Okay. Okay. Here's an example. Okay. Let's get water at, let's stick to Fahrenheit. Let's say we are 200 degrees. Water. No. No. Room temperature water. 75 to 70 degrees. Okay. Here you go. Some of those water molecules are vibrating very fast. Others very slowly. Okay. Right. Some of them are vibrating fast enough to escape. Right. Yes. Okay. But it's just those only at the edge of the escape. They're at the very top. Right. At the very top. They'll escape. The rest are stuck. Stuck. Right. Okay. So now they escape. This is evaporation. Correct. Okay. And you don't have to be boiling water to evaporate the water because the fastest moving molecules are always escaping. Okay. That's okay. That makes sense. Also, just while we're there, if you are a low mass atom or low mass molecule relative to high mass molecules, your low mass ones are vibrating even faster on average. You can split them up. The heavy ones are moving slowly. The light ones are moving quickly. The average of all of them, that's the temperature. So funny how even atoms work kind of the way, even molecules work the way we do. You know, the heavy ones kind of slow. You just kind of chill. Okay. Oh, god. Oh, damn. I got, I got to get about this chair. I got to get out the chair. Give me a second. And you never left the room. Right. And the lighter ones are. So. All right. So for example, our atmosphere has both oxygen and nitrogen in it. And the oxygen molecule weighs slightly more than the nitrogen molecule. Okay. So on average, if you separated out the oxygen, it would be at a lower temperature than the nitrogen. But mix them together, you only get one temperature because there's a mixture. That's what I'm saying about temperature. Okay. Okay. So heat. Let's go to that individual vibrating molecule and say, how much energy you got? Write down that number. Let's go to the next one. How much energy you got? Write down that number and just keep doing it for every molecule for every molecule in your soup. So it's not. Okay, got you. So the sum of all the kinetic energies of all the vibrating molecules. That's how much heat is in the thing. Gotcha. Okay. So one is an average. The other is the actual number, the sum of all the. So your cup of coffee in the morning at 210 degrees Fahrenheit. Right. Is hotter than the ocean. But the ocean has more heat. Oh, snap. It's hotter than the ocean. But the ocean, because the ocean has more molecules and you're going to add up the sum. You add up the sum of all the molecules. Total molecules. Okay. That's why your coffee cup, your coffee cup is not going to start a hurricane. Right. It doesn't have enough energy in the coffee cup to make that happen. And that heat is the all the energy in the ocean. Oh my gosh. And that's why the ocean can start a hurricane, but your coffee can only make your morning very bad because it's filled in your lap. Or it can speed up your digestive tract and you're stuck in the car when you got a goot. Coffee has other consequences to your life. About that part. That's the last time I drink coffee and get stuck in traffic. So that is a very important. So now watch what happens. So now we have climate change where the world is heating. Right. And you can say, okay, how much did the, the air, we don't want the air to go up by two degrees Celsius, whatever, because that could trigger other changes. Well, let's check the ocean. How much did the ocean go up? The ocean went up a fourth of a degree. Or like a half a degree. And you're saying to yourself, that's not much. Right. Do you know how much total energy that is? Oh my gosh. That is. Oh my gosh. Okay. So Chuck, that's why when you're trying to create the energy budget of a climate system, right, there's sunlight coming in and it warms the air. Was that where all the energy goes? No, no, all the whole energy that goes into the ocean and it can hang out there lurking. All right. So you could, you could reduce your carbon footprint and reduce the warming of the atmosphere. Then the ocean says, I got heat. I can dump into the atmosphere and I can keep doing this even after you have corrected your behavior to protect future generations. And the balance, it's actually an imbalance at this moment, the relationship between the heat that the land retains and the atmosphere and the ocean, the ocean wins every time. Right. Because of, it's this tremendous heat reservoir. So I just wanted to distinguish the difference between heat and temperature. And there's one little thing you might not know. Okay. Do you know air conditions, right? It's like, it's hot outside and it makes you cool on the inside. Okay. Yes. Okay. All right. Do you ever ask how it accomplishes this? Um, not really. I just turn it on and it works. And from the time that I was a kid, I know that you don't leave the door open because we're not trying to cool the whole neighborhood. What the hell? Things were trying to cool the whole neighborhood? Step the door. Chuck, I thought you had finished your therapy on your childhood experiences, but apparently some sessions remain. So, so what's happening there is, okay, there is heat inside of your room. No matter what temperature your room is, as long as it's above absolute zero, there is heat. There is heat. There is a pump that takes that heat, removes it from your air and sticks it outside. That's why no matter the temperature outside, if you feel the air conditioner, it's hotter at the air conditioner. Why is it hotter? Because it just pulled that heat from your, your 72 degree room temperature, room that you're trying to keep cool. It pulled it out and it can reverse that. Okay. So let's reverse it. It's called reverse. It's a heat pump, a reverse heat pump in your winter. Okay. You want it to be warmer in your room than the outside. Once you switch the heat pump, your air conditioner says, okay, let me take heat from this cold air out there. This is 40, 50 degrees. I don't care. Let's take heat from that cold air and put it in your room and make your room hotter, even hotter than it would otherwise be compared to the outside. It can do that because there is heat there, no matter what the temperature is, as long as it's above that, as long as it's above absolute zero. That is okay. It's clever engineering. Just thank us. You're brilliant. Go hug your favorite engineer. This is where this comes from. Brilliant. Okay. So I'm going to admit that when we started this, I was like, this guy has really dug a hole for himself this time. No way. No way. This is going to be interesting. But I got it. This is great. Next time you sip a cup of coffee looking out at the ocean. Yeah. Just think to yourself. Just know that that ocean has more heat than this hot, scalding cup of coffee. You could burn yourself with the coffee, but the hurricane won't matter to the hurricane. That's right. Wow. That is so cool, man. That is cool. All right. That's a quick one. T-Mobile 5G Home Internet has some big news you should know about. They now have the fastest 5G Home Internet, according to the experts at Ucluspeed Test. All right. So let's unpack that. It means photo backups happen faster. Streaming a documentary doesn't stall halfway through. What's really notable is that the jump in speed doesn't come with added complexity. Setup is simple. Plug it in and you're online in less than 15 minutes. And the value side of the equation holds too. With a plan price that's backed by a five-year price guarantee. So if you want the fastest 5G Home Internet with a simple setup and savings that stick, get T-Mobile 5G Home Internet. And if you don't want that, wait a minute. Why wouldn't you want that? Just visit t-mobile.com home internet to check availability today. Price guarantee exclusions like taxes and fees apply. Fastest based on Ucluspeed Test intelligence data, second half 2025. All rights reserved. Security usually means extra steps and complications. But with Apple Pay, secure payments are simple. Your transactions are authenticated with Face ID, Touch ID or passcode. So security is built in when you check out. Plus, your name isn't shared with merchants and they don't see your actual card number. Whether you're shopping in-store, online or an app, protecting your money should be simple. Pay the Apple way. Terms apply. This episode is brought to you by Progressive, where drivers who saved by switching saved nearly $750 on average. Plus, auto customers qualify for an average of seven discounts. Quote now at Progressive.com to see if you could save. Progressive Casualty Insurance Company and Affiliates, national average 12 month savings of $744 by new customers surveyed who saved with Progressive between June 2022 and May 2023. Potential savings will vary. Discounts not available in all states and situations. Speed versus acceleration. I knew one day we were going to have to have this talk. Sit down, Chuck. Chuck, I need a word with you. Son, I've been meaning to talk to you about speed versus acceleration. You're of age now, where this is the time. Don't worry, there's nothing to be embarrassed about. So, there's a nice scene, a memorable scene in the movie Top Gun, where they just came out of their planes and they're holding their helmet. And what does one of them say to the other as they high five each other? I've got the need for speed. I feel the need for speed and I want to push back on that, if I may. You want to push back on the need for speed? Yes, I am. Oh, no. Because I claim that their speed is almost irrelevant to what it is that's triggering their emotions. Really? Yeah. Because, for example, right now, at our latitude on Earth, the rotation of Earth is carrying us due east at 800 miles an hour. Are you saying, I feel the need for speed and this is great? No. Well, that may explain why I keep throwing up every time I stand up. It could be a reason why I'm vomit. So, no, but I see I'm about to say that what we think of as motion sickness is not motion sickness, it's acceleration sickness. Okay. Okay. So, Earth is in orbit around the sun, 18 miles per second. All of these speeds are way faster than anything they're doing in their airplane. This is true. So, it's the not really after speed. Wow, 18 miles in a second. In a second. One second. From my house, I would overshoot the Bronx. I mean, no. I would overshoot Brooklyn from where I am right now. You'd end up in Long Island Sound. I would. Wow. In one second. Okay. So, you live in Jersey. You cross the Hudson River, the Wither Manhattan, all of Brooklyn and then you come out the other side. Oh my God, that's amazing. So, here's the thing. When you are moving at constant speed, your body has no idea you're moving at any speed at all. Okay. It's only when your speed changes that you get some sense of motion. And by definition, when your speed changes, it's an acceleration. No. In physics, an acceleration can be positive or negative. In the English language, we have another word for when it's negative acceleration. It's just called what? Deceleration. Deceleration. Okay. So, I might say acceleration in my next few minutes. I mean, increasing or decreasing, it doesn't matter. So, either positive or negative acceleration. Okay. When that happens, you feel it and that's what you're reacting to. All right. By the way, think of velocity. Okay. So, a velocity, a change of velocity is an acceleration. But a velocity has a direction. Right. But suppose you're banking a turn. Your direction is constantly changing. Well, if velocity has to have one direction, now I'm changing the direction, that's also an acceleration. So, here's my point. When you're in a moving object, no matter its speed, if the direction or the speed changes, you are accelerating. And when you feel an acceleration, your body is going to respond. If you accelerate forward, your body will be thrown backwards. If you decelerate quickly, your body goes forward. If you bank a turn, you lean against the door or mix the person next to you in the front seat. So, that's how you know you're accelerating. Because your body is responding in this way. So, these folks said, I feel the need for speed. It's because they're doing barrel rolls in their plane and upside down and all the stuff they're doing, that's what they're feeling. But if they were going perfectly at Mach 1, 2, 3, 4, or 30, they wouldn't be saying, I feel the need for speed because that's not anything they would notice. This has been the complaint about the Lexus car. When it first came out, the Lexus was a, you know, a luxury car and that ride was smooth. I read one commentary and it said, it's like sitting on your living room couch while you're driving your car. That sounds lovely. So, nobody who feels the need for speed is buying a Lexus. They want a car that can bank turns and go from zero to 60 in whatever how many seconds you're talking about. That's an acceleration. Yeah, but it doesn't sound good to say, I feel the need for acceleration. It's a celebration of acceleration. Now I just sound like Jesse Jackson. That's what I'm saying. My man rhymes anything that comes out of his mouth. Celebration of acceleration. Keep hope alive. Okay, so that's all I'm trying to tell you. So that's why they will give top speed when you're buying a car. They will give a top speed, but they will also give zero to 60 or zero to 50 in a certain amount of time. So that is the change in velocity over a certain amount of time. And so if you change velocity in less and less amount of time, your acceleration is higher and higher and higher. That's why they keep trying to drop the acceleration time. Then it's more ahead. It's more head snapping. Now, right? Yeah. Now. So everybody loves Tesla. Oh, because it's high. It'd be true for any well made electric car will have very high acceleration. Yeah. Even at low speeds, right? Tesla's can accelerate zero to 60 in three, four seconds. Yeah, it's great. And I've been in it and you can feel it. It's like yeah. Okay. Okay. So now watch. Let's kick it up a notch. You ready? I don't think you're ready. Are you see? Okay. All right. I'm okay. There is a fan. Hold on. Because I don't want to accelerate too fast. I better strap it. Okay. So if acceleration is the rate of change of your velocity, okay? So that if you rate changes quickly, you have high acceleration, you will feel this response all the more. Okay. All right. If acceleration is the rate in change in your velocity, what happens when you have a rate of change of your acceleration? Oh my goodness. Let me guess. Your head explodes. Yes. Well, okay. So if you have a rate of change of acceleration, that has a term in physics is called the jerk. Okay. All right. So watch. Oh, man, that's great. Okay. So watch what happens. You ready? Go ahead. So I'm headed towards a brick wall. I'm trying to come up with these examples on the spot. Headed towards a brick wall. And I said, I should put on my brakes. So you put on your brakes. Okay. And while you put on your brakes, you feel yourself, you're leaning into the shoulder strap. Okay. When you hit the wall, your body jerks forward because you had a steady slowing down of your speed until your speed went to zero instantly. So that is a rate of change of your acceleration. And then you feel a jerk. Okay. Why did we run into a wall? Okay. So the jerk is what actually does sort of musculoskeletal damage in an accident. Okay. Okay. Because we can sustain an acceleration. When they say I have one G two G, those are pure constant accelerations. But if you go from one G to six Gs in an instant, your whole body snaps. Right. That's this. And so the jerk is one reverse. And the same thing reverse. Correct. So what you're basically saying is jumping out of a 20 story window doesn't kill you. That's correct. It's the ground. It does. It's the ground. If there were no ground, right. You'd buy. Oh man. So that's velocity, acceleration and jerk. So almost every and there's some cars, they say in this car, you can feel the road. If you ever test drive like a sports car, they tell you that. Right. Well, what does it mean to feel the road? Well, if the road were perfectly smooth, you wouldn't feel anything. So the fact that the road has certain bumps, the Lexus wouldn't feel those bumps because the tires are adjusting to it. But your sports car, which has quote rigid suspension, it is rigid enough so that you're feeling that. Right. So you and the road into bumps and wiggles and the turns and twists on the road, you're feeling it all. Nice. You're feeling it. And so you get. So this is what you like. This is what you seek. This is what the sports enthusiast is actually after, even if they're not self-conscious of it. Because if they only wanted high speeds, you can just get on a, you know, get on a high speed train and then you don't feel it because they're smooth. No, you want to, you want to bank the turns and feel it. That reminds me of a guy on the, I was on the turnpike and a guy comes by on a motorcycle and he's already, I'm doing 80. So he had to be doing a little faster than 80 because he came by me. And then he pulls back on the throttle and pops a wheelie at 80 miles an hour and pulls off. Okay. So and, and I, and I'm pretty sure he was like, I feel the need for acceleration. And with the high accelerating cars, of course, a constant acceleration is a, is a one time thing. By the way, you either press yourself back or forward or lean one way or another and any abrupt change in that creates this, this jolt. But even if you, if you're, if you're going at zero and you floor it, there is the initial head snap. Okay. That's a very high moment of acceleration. But then you stays that way until you like hit the brick wall and then you're snapping another way. So anyhow, I just put, I'm just putting all this out there in case you didn't know. So, uh, all I can say is please take Neil's word for everything he just said. Let's not try the brick wall experiment for ourselves. Okay. We're not responsible for anybody who crashes the car into a wall. All right. Just take his word for it. All right. There it is. Once again, Chuck, you've heard it here and I'm Neil deGrasse Tyson. As always, keep looking up. It's tax season and at LifeLock, we know you're tired of numbers, but here's a big one you need to hear. Billions. That's the amount of money in refunds the IRS has flagged for possible identity fraud. Now here's another big number. 100 million. That's how many data points LifeLock monitors every second. If your identity is stolen, we'll fix it guaranteed. One last big number. Save up to 40% your first year. Visit lifelock.com slash special offer for the threats you can't control. Terms apply. Why have we asked our contractor we found on angie.com to be our kids' legal guardian? 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