Thing You Thought You Knew – Red Hot, Blue Hot
41 min
•Feb 10, 20262 months agoSummary
This StarTalk episode explores three scientific concepts: the incomprehensibly small size of molecules (illustrated through water and air examples), the counterintuitive relationship between temperature and color in physics versus human perception, and the dual mechanisms of food spoilage through biological and quantum chemical degradation.
Insights
- Molecules are so small that a single cup of water contains more water molecules than cups of water in all Earth's oceans, meaning every person shares water molecules with historical figures
- Color temperature in physics contradicts human perception: hotter objects emit blue light while cooler glowing objects emit red light, creating confusion between scientists and photographers
- Food degradation occurs through two distinct mechanisms: biological (microbial growth) and chemical (quantum tunneling causing molecular bond degradation), with implications for long-term space food storage
- Avogadro's number (6.022 × 10^23) represents a scale so large it exceeds the number of stars in the observable universe, challenging human comprehension of extremes
- Crystalline structures like salt and diamonds represent the lowest energy states of molecules, making them extremely stable and long-lasting
Trends
Molecular-scale engineering and quantum manipulation tools enabling custom molecule constructionStandardization challenges between scientific and artistic communities regarding color temperature terminologyLong-duration space mission food technology requiring shelf-stable, microbe-free preservation methodsQuantum physics applications in understanding everyday phenomena like food spoilageCommunication challenges when explaining phenomena at extreme scales beyond human experience
Topics
Molecular scale and Avogadro's numberWater molecule distribution and historical figure molecular sharingColor temperature physics versus human perceptionRed hot, white hot, and blue hot temperature classificationsPhotographic lighting and color temperature standardsBacterial growth rates and food poisoning thresholdsPasteurization and ultra-pasteurization processesQuantum tunneling in molecular degradationVacuum-sealed food preservation for space missionsCrystal formation and molecular energy statesSalt as food preservative and crystalline stabilityChemical versus biological food spoilage mechanismsAbsolute zero and temperature scalesElectromagnetic radiation and wavelength relationshipsMolecular bond stability and energy states
People
Neil deGrasse Tyson
Astrophysicist and primary host discussing molecular physics, color temperature, and food chemistry concepts
Chuck Nice
Co-host providing commentary and reactions to scientific explanations throughout the episode
Abraham Lincoln
Historical figure used as example of person whose water molecules are shared with modern humans
Genghis Khan
Historical figure used as example of person whose water and air molecules are shared with modern humans
Joan of Arc
Historical figure used as example of person whose water molecules are shared with modern humans
Gary Larson
Cartoonist whose comic about potato salad going bad was referenced as example of food spoilage humor
Quotes
"There are more molecules of water in that cup than there are cups of water in all the world's oceans."
Neil deGrasse Tyson•Early in molecules segment
"Every glass of water you drink contains molecules that pass through the kidneys of Abe Lincoln, Genghis Khan, Joan of Arc, pick your favorite historical character."
Neil deGrasse Tyson•Molecules segment
"Hot things are blue. Medium temperature things are white. Cooler things that are still glowing are red."
Neil deGrasse Tyson•Color temperature segment
"A red hot object is the coolest of all hots."
Neil deGrasse Tyson•Color temperature segment
"Food can go bad biologically, and food can go bad chemically."
Neil deGrasse Tyson•Food spoilage segment
Full Transcript
Hey, StarTalkians, we've got yet another Things You Thought You Knew episode. We're talking about small molecules, the temperature of light, and food gone bad. Check it out. Welcome to StarTalk, your place in the universe where science and pop culture collide. StarTalk begins right now. Do you have any idea how small molecules are? Well, seeing as I can't see them, I'm going to say I do not. Right. And even if you did say you knew, I would say you didn't know. I'm just pulling rank here. I'm just saying molecules. I mean, think about it. Our understanding of the existence of atoms did not even come into age until the 20th century. Atoms were still a hypothesis, all right, that there'd be this sort of smallest unit of a material called the atom. By the way, the word atom from the Greek means indivisible. So they imagined that there was some individual minimal part of a thing. But, of course, we bust atoms all the time. So, no, they're not indivisible, but we kept the term. Right. We kept the term atom to describe the electrons, protons, neutrons, the classical particles you learn about in high school chemistry and maybe physics. So molecules are, I could give an example, okay? And this is my favorite example of them all. So I ask you, think about how much water there is in the world, in all the oceans. Okay. And if you go in the middle of the ocean, it's miles deep. okay the titanic was like three and a half mile i forgot the exact number multiple miles below earth's surface okay that's a lot of water it's a lot of water and what is the water molecule h2o h2o okay so two hydrogen one oxygen h2o so it's a salt and dissolved salts and fish poop and stuff like that but by it's basically h2o all over the world all right i love that you threw in the fish poop i'm so proud of you thank you that's the juvenile part the eight-year-olds will want to know that yes there's also fish poop right in the ocean so where else does it go right um and And just to recite the title of a book they may have grown up on, everything poops. Yeah. And it shows, it's just a story. It's for little kids. I know. Because they poop and they know they poop and they're fascinated by it. And it's just an account that everybody poops. And all the fish poop in the ocean. Okay. They don't go onto land to poop. Yeah. I read that book to my daughter. She thought it was crappy. Oh, Chuck. I couldn't help it. So they don't have outhouses on the land, right? Right. It's all in there. That would be amazing, though. poop in situ. Oh God, you just gave me the best thought in the world where a fish just shows up at somebody's apartment door or house and just lets one go and goes, how do you like it? Put it into your own house. Because we put all our sewage into theirs. Right? Now you know how it feels. All right. So So I now take a glass and fill it with water. Okay. A regular cup, a cup, okay, that you might drink water out of. Okay. Fill it up. So stare at that cup and I will tell you that there are more molecules of water in that cup than there are cups of water in all the world's oceans. holy crap wow okay now the reason why i couched it that way is because that leads to fascinating conclusions okay if this cup of water has more molecules than there are cups of water in all the world that means when i drink this cup of water and it comes out of me eventually right through snot, spit, sweat, pee, whatever, it'll come out of you and it goes back into the environment. Okay. You have excreted enough molecules to populate every single cup of water that is ever drawn from the oceans. Just got to give it enough time. Okay. So this moisture goes back into the environment and the molecules that pass through my kidneys are now working their way around the world. Give it enough time. I can guarantee you that there will be some molecules in that next cup of water you scoop that pass through my kidneys. So I get to make the following statement. Every glass of water you drink contains molecules that pass through the kidneys of Abe Lincoln, uh Genghis Khan uh Joan of Arc uh pick pick your favorite historical character okay you have shared water molecules with that person well all I can say is that somehow you've done it Neil you've done it you've made it so I am never again going to drink water I think I ran the calculation. It's about 100 molecules per cup of water. That's how small molecules are. That's my point. That's the whole point of this exercise. I'll give you one more. You ready? Go for it. All right. There are more molecules in a breath of air. This would be now nitrogen molecules, mostly nitrogen and oxygen. Right. N2 and O2. because they're each in a molecular form. And a little bit of argon and some carbon dioxide. But it's predominantly nitrogen and oxygen. There are more molecules, air molecules, in a breath of air you take than there are breaths of air in all of the Earth's atmosphere. Oh, gotcha, right. Okay, so it means when you exhale, Right. air that comes out of your lungs scatters back into the air And there are plenty of air molecules to scatter into every other breath that will ever be taken in the future history of the world. Wow. So you're not only sharing water molecules with people who come before you, you're sharing air molecules that you have breathed. That's how small they are. This is my point. And so it's remarkable that we were able to discover them at all, much less the atoms that they comprise. What you do is you look at things that they do that you can see through microscopes, electron microscopes, this sort of thing. And you say the only understanding of this is if the atoms got together and made a molecule. But nobody's holding up a molecule. Here, take this and plug it in this way. There's some ways to image molecules. We're on the verge of that. It's something called quantum construction. there's a there's a real term for it but what they're actually doing is if you get tools small enough you can take a molecule and put it here and add an atom and build things at a molecular level the way carpenters or construction workers assemble buildings by putting bricks together okay that's freaky and scary it's a little freaky and scary right if you have a brick that's a smaller part of a larger hole you just need tools that can maneuver the bricks right if i want to make a molecule that's never been made before and i make sure that it's a stable molecule how am i going to do that do i just put all the money and jiggle them maybe they won't want to do that on their own but if i make it happen with with with quantum tweezers then i can start making molecules and you might even be able to make life at that point and not wait for it to happen by chance wow so so a frontier is our ability to manipulate those things that we could never see. Interesting. That is amazing. But I think of it not as creepy that you're drinking water that passed through someone else's kidneys. No, I don't ever want to have that thought again. I'm so sorry that you brought it up. You're going to stop drinking water entirely. Let me tell you, the whole time you've been talking, I've been wanting to drink this right here. I'm not doing it. You're not doing it. I'm not doing it now. It's over. I just can't. I can't drink water anymore. I'm going to have to go my whole life now. It's going to have to be great Kool-Aid because guess what? I know that I'm not sharing that with Jesus and Genghis Khan. Because I know that Jesus and Genghis Khan did not have Kool-Aid. So now I can only drink great Kool-Aid. Thank you. So, yeah, so it's just they're impressively little. And here we are in our big macroscopic scale. I mean, think about most of the history of research and investigation and trying to understand the world around us. We were anchored to our five senses as the one and as the only means of of measuring and decoding what the world was doing around us. Right. And forget molecules. We didn't even know about bacteria or viruses. All right. And so you catch a disease, you find somebody to blame or you were a sinner. You know you had other explanations for it none of which bore any correspondence with an objective reality that we would not then glean until many many centuries later I don know what you talking about We still haven learned that lesson Oh, that's true. People say people don't know how to relate to viruses. We still don't know. Oh, man. Oh, that is really cool, though. Yeah. So so so there it is. I have nothing more to add to that. Oh, and by the way, this is how you get Avogadro's number. That's the count of molecules in a mole. What's the mole number? Yeah, so you have to look at the element on the periodic table or the atomic weight of the molecule itself. Right. And so let's look at carbon. Carbon has – its atomic number is 12. The natural carbon has six protons and six neutrons. So a mole of carbon is 12 grams of carbon. Gotcha. Okay. A mole of silicon would be 18 grams of silicon. Okay. So because its atomic number is 18. Right. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I didn't say this right. Carbon's atomic number is six because you're counting protons. But its atomic weight is six plus six. You get 12. Okay. All right. So that's six protons, six neutrons. Right. So my only point here is, so you can ask, if you have a mole of a substance, how many molecules is that? Okay? So 12 grams. You know, 12 grams is not very much. No, it's not. Okay? It's not. So 12 grams is a third of an ounce of carbon. How many molecules in it? Well, it's Avogadro's number of molecules. And that's 6.022, just call it 6, times 10 to the 23rd power. Right. Okay, cool. 23rd. That's insane. That's insane. Yeah. Yes. I mean, that's, I mean, that's really not a conceivable number. That number is a hundred times bigger than the number of stars in the observable universe. Yeah, I was going to say that's not a conceivable number because like the 23 zeros, like once You can't say, oh, it's twice as big as this other thing you already know about. Exactly. Because there is no other thing. Like it just doesn't, there's just nothing that, it's crazy. That's crazy. Right, right. This is a problem when you are dealing with extremes, and we confront this all the time in astrophysics, right? How do you talk about the biggest explosion in the universe? How do you measure that, right? You know, usually you measure something because you have other things that are bigger, other things that are smaller, and then you say it's somewhere in there, and then you triangulate on it. Oh, now I understand. But if it's more than anything you've seen before, it becomes a challenge to explain. It's a philosophical issue of communication, right? And our own physiology's ability to come to terms with things that fall far outside of our life experience. I'm Ali Khan Hemraj and I support StarTalk on Patreon. This is StarTalk with Neil deGrasse Tyson. I, as an astrophysicist, know that we have something called color temperature. Okay? I am aware of that. We practically invented that concept. Well, I like photography, so that's how I know color temperature. Well, I'm going to get there, and you're going to find out why I have issues. Okay? Uh-oh. So, here's what happens. If you have an object that is of a given temperature, if it's hotter than absolute zero, it will be radiating some electromagnetic energy. Okay. Right? So the colder it is, the longer are the wavelengths of light it emits, radio waves. The universe is pretty cold, it's only three degrees Kelvin, that's emitting microwaves. And the hotter it gets, the more it emits light of higher and higher energy. So let's keep going. Eventually, you can heat this thing up so that some of the energy that it emits comes out in the red part of the spectrum. That object, if you looked at it with your eyes, you'd say it's red. Okay? It'll start doing that at, you know, 1,000, 1,500 degrees. Okay? Keep increasing the temperature. it's not only giving you red light, it's also giving you light from the rest of the rainbow, from the rest of the optical spectrum. So it'll give you not only red, but also orange, yellow, green, blue, violet. If you do that in roughly equal amounts, the glowing object turns white. Okay. Because you have equal amounts of all the colors of the rainbow. So now if you keep raising the temperature this energy output Continues to shift and now it's emitting more blue light than red light If you're meeting more blue than red through the spectrum that object will look blue Okay, okay, so I'm going from like a couple of thousand degrees to like 6,000 degrees to 10, 12, 15, 20,000 degrees. Is that on my stove? I'm getting there. I'm getting there. I'm getting there. So what? I'm getting there. That's what I'm saying. That's what I'm saying. Hang with me. Hang with me. So an object goes from what is basically invisible to you, unless you had radio wave eyeballs or microwave eyeballs, to something that's glowing kind of red, and then it goes to amber, and then it starts glowing white, and then it'll start glowing blue, and it'll forever more glow blue but it keeps giving you higher and higher energy. It'll give you x-rays, it can even give you gamma rays. But the part of it that comes through the spectrum is more in the red than in the blue. So hot things are blue. Medium temperature things are white. Cooler things that are still glowing are red. Okay. So if you have an electric stove, when you first turn it on, it feels warm but you can't see it in the dark. No. Okay. That's giving you infrared. We can't see infrared. It's got to glow so hot that it's giving you a little bit of red. Right. And then you say oh it's glowing red hot. Right. But a red hot object is the coolest of all hots. Ah. Okay. Damn. Damn. That's what I'm saying. Sorry. Sorry red. Dead. Okay. Oh man. So when I see red hot this and red hot that I'm saying ain't so bad right that ain't so bad okay so now watch okay so that is what's happening astrophysically that's what's happening in the laws of physics but now bring in the artistic photographer okay okay and in art if you're going to paint a picture a painting you're going to create a painting and you want the scene to feel cool like it's in the arctic what is your predominant color in the painting white white or not just white blue blue especially blue okay so they say that it's cool right this is there's a cool color and right okay and then when they want to show something hot like hell and devils and everything they use the color red all right because that's how our emotions we see ice cubes and it's bluish and anything that got hot enough to hurt us is glowing red hot. It's rare that you'll see something so hot that it's glowing white or glowing blue. Not on earth. Because that stuff gets hot enough when it's red hot. All right. So our entire life experience is shifted to the cool end of the spectrum with us thinking that red hot is actually hot. As a result, we have the absurd conversation between an astrophysicist and a photographer. It's, um, okay. I need a cooler lamp for this. Right. So what do they do? They get the 6,000 degree bulb instead of the 3000 degree bulb. This is in the days when you use tungsten, but we still think of those temperatures even in the led world. Okay. So when they say make this scene cooler, they mean get a higher temperature lamp. And when they say we want to make this scene warmer, it means they want to put in a lower temperature lamp that glows at like 3000 degrees or 2500 degrees. And I'm pissed off at this. I'm just saying. That's great. If you're going to be numerical about whether something is warm or cool, do you have permission to leave the artists behind in this conversation? You scientifically illiterate troglodyte? No, I'm just saying. Damn photographers. I'm just saying, if you want to say that it's seen as cool blue and warm red, fine, but don't hand it a temperature. Right. Don't give it temperatures. Because you have the absurd conversation. Increase the color temperature of the lamp so that the scene it's illuminating is cooler well see you got i hate that you have to talk to each other in temperatures otherwise we wouldn't know what to do so if if you're ever shooting something and somebody says all right yo let's let's uh give me that give me that daylight and daylight is 5600 right it basically between that and 6 000 and by the way that is that is the temperature of the sun Right Okay And wait wait wait wait wait And that is the temperature of the sun And so so, and daylight, does that look blue to you? No, I mean, it's bluer than a, than a, a, a cooler, well, cooler lamp. It's bluer than a low temperature lamp. Right. But, but if you look at the 5,600, that's daylight. By the way, it's not yellow. That is not a yellow lamp. You still have people saying, the sun is yellow. No, it's not. The sun is freaking white. Okay? Right. I interrupted you. What are you saying? No, you didn't. Basically, that's what it is. It's really like the only reference that photographers have. But what you're saying is photographers need to come up with a new reference because what they're saying is scientifically wrong. The numbers Yeah, it's artistically sensible, but then don't put numbers on it. Because these numbers mean things. If you're going to put a 10,000 degree lamp, that's a hot lamp. And that's a very blue lamp. Blue is hot in the universe. That makes sense. I mean, now... We have blue stars. They're 20, 30,000 freaking degrees. We have red stars. They're called red giants. They're hovering around 1,000, 1,500, 2,000 degrees. Barely glowing. So I'm... I like... What you're saying, I just like the fact that I'm changing red hot to white hot from now on. Now, some people know that white hot is hotter than red hot. Right. It's just not common in society. Blue hot is my newest thing. I'm going blue hot all the time. You know what I mean? You know what? All the way with a blue hot poker. That's what I want for you. The problem is it's melted by then. I mean, a fireplace poker, that's a problem. That's right. You're right. Because it's, oh, yeah, that would melt. Damn. Yeah, yeah, yeah. You start melting stuff. That's a problem. That's why we have very little experience with white hot and blue hot. But red hot, you can get almost anything to red hot temperatures. And you don't see a lot of white hot, though. No, you don't. You know, my dad was a printer. And so in printing, he owned a printing company. And the coolest thing in the plant was how you make photo plates. So the plate is treated with a chemical that when exposed to this super white hot light, the image is burned onto the plate and it's called burning a plate. Right. And then that image is the only thing on the plate now that will transfer ink. And that's how you transfer an image. But they used, I forget the name of these little tubes that came together and I forget. Oh, it's an arc lamp. Arc, yes. Yeah, carbon arc. And the light in between. That's a very high temperature arc between there. That's correct. And it was the coolest thing in the world and you weren't allowed to look at it because it would make you blind. Right, because it's high in ultraviolet light. It's very high energy light. Right. And what they do is they have these carbon rods, basically, and you attempt to send current through it, but it has to gap across an air gap. And depending on what your separation was and how big your current was, you could determine what the threshold was before you jumped the arc. Right. And there it was. That's exactly it. And the whole thing was just those two tubes and the light in between. And you had to look at it with like the same way you look at, I forget the glass. The welder's goggles. It's a welder's goggles. You got to look at it with that. Same thing you look at an eclipse with. And it was the coolest thing in the world, but it was white hot. Yeah, yeah. And hot, very clearly hotter than anything red hot, right? That's what that is. So these are my issues that I'm bringing to you, Chuck. I don't have a solution for them. I'm just highlighting them. And by the way, when I walk up to a water cooler and the two spigots are color-coded, one is red, and I say, okay, I'm no longer in my lab. I'm in the real world, and so blue is not hotter than red. They think blue is cold, so that's my goal. I can't tell you how much of my life I've wasted staring at twin spigots on a water cooler, figuring out which one is the cold water. So what we should do is maybe the red is hot, and then maybe pink for, like, the cooler blue, for the cooler water. like you want to keep working on that chuck i don't know about that keep working oh great great no nobody wants to drink gray water that's for sure i'm trying to all right that's all that's that's all i want to do on this explainer that's a really cool but see now you got me mad at the fact that all these things exist in life that tell us that blue is cooler than red because now that you said that it's everywhere and even the photographers know it's hotter because they ask for a higher temperature. That's right. That's the insidiousness of it all. All right. Cool. Anyhow. I know what we should do. Here's the solution. Next time you see a photographer, people, just punch them. Did that work for you so far? Is that really? Is that how you, you did that to your boss a few times? How far did that get you? No, exactly. Didn't we find you on the street before you had this gig? Right. I punched my boss one too many times. I want to talk about when food goes bad. Okay. See, already you got me. I love it. When food goes bad, because something I'm very well aware of, because I come from a childhood where mom and grandma almost refused to almost throw away. I mean, it's a freeze to throw away. They don't want to waste food. They don't want to waste food. Never. Even if the food would kill you, they wouldn't throw away the food. I'm just like, mom, this thing is moving. What are you talking about? You know, you put that in a pan, it'll be just fine. that ain't nothing but a little mold that ain't nothing but a little mold you cut that mold off of there that's just fine these are people who grew up in the depression where hunger was a thing so they don't want them young whippersnappers just throwing away food how dare you waste food and one of my favorite comics was Gary Larson and the subtitle was when the potato salad goes bad and you go inside the refrigerator and the potato salad's got a gun and it's holding it up to the lettuce or something. That's funny. It's like mugging other foods. When it goes bad, right. And he chose the right thing, the potato salad, right? Because that's the one you got to watch out for. Exactly. So why am I an astrophysicist talking about that? I'll tell you why. Because there's the normal kind of way food goes bad, all right? You leave it in there too long and something grows on it, all right? Something else wants to eat the food. and it's some kind of microbe, some bacteria or combination of bacteria that start eating the food. And there could be mold that's enjoying the food that you were going to eat. All right. Now, first of all, there's this bacteria on the food all the time. It's just a matter of how much is there. All right. And you have a digestive tract. and depending on what you ate, the food will take a certain amount of time to go from your mouth to come out the other side or to get metabolized. All right. So if you ingest bacteria on your food that would otherwise be bad for you, that bacteria begins to multiply. All right. It's multiplying at some rate in the refrigerator, but when it warms up to your body temperature, because you've just eaten it, it'll duplicate faster. Okay. So there it is. Duplicate. Now it's in your throat and it's in your stomach. Duplicate faster. It's in your, your small intestine and your large intestine. If it gets out before it takes over, then you don't even think anything of it. No, it's no problem. It's no problem. So, but there are these thresholds where if you ingest a certain amount, the doubling time of that bacteria will then manifest itself while it's still in your digestive track. And you end up with nausea, diarrhea, whatever. Okay. So that's sort of normal food poisoning. All right. Normal. And we also, we've developed a means to detect by the smell when something goes bad. Okay. Evolutionarily, if you casually ingested things that would make you sick and possibly die, if you enjoyed the smell of rotting food, that's a branch, that is a genetic branch that's headed for extinction. Because, right, because you and all your descendants who like the smell of rotting food that would kill you, you would end up with none of you to then propagate this feature about yourself. Right. All right. So we did. Unless you're a vulture. Unless you're a vulture, right. But they're cool. They got it. They're cool with it. Depending on how digestive your gastric juices are from one species to another, for humans, we know what those limits are. You smell it. Ooh, that's bad. And you throw it away, except for your mama. That's right. All right. So that's the normal kind of when food goes bad, right? But suppose you got rid of all the microbes and then you sort of vacuum sealed it. Now, there's no microbes. anyway and you put it in a really cold temperature because all as far as we have been able to measure chemical and biological processes double their rate every 10 degrees celsius okay okay that's why cooling things make them last longer right that right so you can do this you can so does it mean it stops at zero it would have to stop yes okay zero yes there nothing nothing nothing happens at absolute zero oh no i don't mean absolute zero i mean if you just start you say every 10 degrees celsius oh okay yeah so you it would stop at absolute zero at absolute zero oh you think zero just on the yeah i was thinking on the reg there's nothing special about that zero there's the only special zero is on the kelvin absolute scale and we did a whole explainer video Yes, we did. And we put a link in there somewhere. Okay. That's right. That's right. All right. So every 10 degrees, it's half. So you can just keep halving all the way down. Okay. So you can do the experiment if you want it. You know, get milk and bring it to room temperature. Okay. Then get milk, put it in the refrigerator temperature. And then get milk, put it like right at near freezing. And then get milk and just freeze it. And just sit back and just watch what happens. All right. The microbes that are already in it are doing their thing. And you can look at the temperature differences and you can calculate this up. And basically the milk might last a day or two. Oh, by the way, what does ultra pasteurized mean? Ultra pasteurized? They took out even more microbes than were there in the normal pasteurized. Wow. Okay. Now with twice as little. Twice as little. I would say half as much, but you can say twice as little. That's fine. So when you do that, the pasteurized milk, look at the expiration date on the ultra pasteurized milk versus the regular pasteurized milk. It's way longer in the future because there's so few microbes there. They're slowly coming along and they're doubling time. They still have a doubling time. All right. But they started out with fewer. So they're not going to get there. This milk smells nasty threshold until much later. Okay. So that's the biological when food goes bad. But I want to take this up a notch. Are you ready? Okay. Go ahead. Let us get rid of all microbes. Let us irradiate the food. All right. So now there's nothing living on it at all. Now we don't want anything to come to it after the fact. So now let's vacuum seal it. Okay. So now nothing's getting to it. Nothing's on it. Okay. So now I have a slab of meat vacuum sealed. Okay. Now I don't have to refrigerate it because there's no microbes that I can put out on the counter. I can put it up in the cabinet. Okay? You can put it there for years and years and years. You know why I know about this and think about it? Because when you're going to store food on a long space mission, you don't want to carry freezers with you and refrigerators. You want food that can just survive on the shelf. That could just be. Be. You need food that just is. That food that is. Right. You need your steak to be a Twinkie. I'm eating Twinkie steak. Twinkies from eight years ago take just the same as you bought them yesterday. Right. My steak is good for 20 years. All right. So, but here's what happens. Okay. Right. And this is where quantum physics comes in. So you didn't see that coming, did you? I did not. You did not see that coming. All right. You totally had me. All right. So molecules exist in a state of existence. All right. All molecules do. And you can ask yourself, is the molecule happy in that state of existence? Is it happy? In other words, is there a lower state of energy that this molecule can occupy? Because if there is, it's going to want to go there. Is that state of energy, I'm such a big molecule. let me break into two. Now I have less energy than before because molecules don't like remaining in higher states of energy. And those two molecules can break and then they settle into a lower and lower form of energy. That's how the molecule wants to exist. Gotcha. Okay. Right. All right. So how does it get access to that lower form of energy? If you made the molecule and it's happy here, how does it decide one day to not be happy? It has me as a father. Okay. It is, it is. So think of it as in a well, but there's a lower well off to the side. How do you get to that? Well, you have to go up a little hill before you go down to that lower well. So this molecule has to find a way to get over that hill and it'll immediately go to a lower energy state. If there's nothing to stick it over that hill, it would last forever. But quantum physics said all these molecules and particles are also waves. And the wave has an existence on the other side of that hill. And there's a chance that this particle can disappear from this state and reappear on the other side of that hill in a state where it slides down to a lower energy level. Quantum physics takes it there. It's called tunneling. Okay. So these bonds that are formed chemically, they're not forever. If there's another bond, it could think about that has a lower energy. And by the way, when it has lower energy, it gives off energy. So this, so this, so your food has complex molecules in it. They're these protein fibers and it's, it's complex, right? So given enough time, quantum physics degrades the texture of the food. So, your meat will still be meat in five years, but you'll start noticing, start getting a little mealy. Right. Where's that chewy? What is happening? What's happening to that? Oh, no. Why does my meat now taste like soylent greens? Because it is. Hey, what happened to Mac the astronaut? Where was he? Well, he died. He died. Why is this suit still here? So all I'm saying is food can go bad biologically, and food can go bad chemically. Wow. Now, you know the lowest energy state of anything? Something at absolute zero. Well, yes, that's by temperature. But in terms of configuration, the lowest energy state, one of the lowest energy states you can occupy is crystal. Oh. Crystal form. So that's why it's weird that there's a whole cult around crystals. Crystals. Because I get so much energy from my crystal. Crystals have the lowest energy of that molecule. That's. So it's just weird to knowing physics and chemistry to see this unfold. That's funny. In your eyes in this, the 21st century. But anyhow, when you go to buy salt, are you checking the freshness date on the salt? Have you ever done this? Are you kidding me? I actually have some Jesus salt in my cupboard. So, plus, where do you get salt? It gets mined from places that have been there for millions of years, okay? Salt that's down below the ground? Right. That's just salt. It hadn't been touched. That's right. Okay? It didn't become something else. It is salt. It has been salt. So crystalline things, like diamonds are forever. Diamond is crystal. Okay? Now, I learned that there's another state of carbon that's a slightly lower energy than diamond. So diamonds are not actually forever, but they're really, really long-lived. Okay? And so another crystal is sugar. Okay? By the way, if sugar goes bad, it's not because something happened to the crystal. Because you put it next to the barbecue pit or something, and it took on the smells. Right. Or something else was near it. Or it absorbed water somehow. Yeah, exactly. You didn't have it in a place that was dry enough. And then the other things are what then messes with it. But the sugar crystal itself is happy. So, yes, I think salt does have dates on it, but that shows that you can use it and buy the next one. Right. Better put some more salt on that, man. It's about to go bad. It's about to go bad. You know what happened with Tabasco sauce? I don't think this is apocryphal. I think this is real. You know what happened? You know, Tabasco sauce, a little bit. Yeah, I love Tabasco sauce. Are you kidding me? Okay. Yeah. They figured out how to double your consumption of Tabasco sauce. How's that? Someone in the company suggested that they make the whole twice as big. Brilliant. So you still think you're not using much? You're using twice as much as you used to. And guess what? That makes perfect sense. And they just double the sales, and that person got a raise. so anyhow so i just want to say that when food goes bad it can go bad by the this other way that we don't think about much but for very long-term storage like in the apocalyptic earth this sort of thing that's how you you would need to think about that and want to know about but that'd be true for any food stuff at all so you have to watch out you can't you can't really stop the quantum phenomenon for going on. So it would still taste like steak, but the texture tends to be one of the things that goes first. So the moral of this story is during the nuclear apocalypse, you better make sure that you have some salt. By the way, salted salt is a preservative of other foods. I was about to say, because your meat's going to taste like crap. and your salt's the only thing that's going to last so so there you have it chuck it so that was just a quick one no that was a good one i like that the chemical decomposition of molecules food molecules any molecules in general that's right yeah super cool man there you have it all right this has been another star talk explainer video neil degrasse tyson chuck always good to have you always a pleasure as always keep looking up .