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  • 00:02

    Today I want to talk to you about matter.

  • 00:05

    Specifically, what happens when it collides with other matter.

  • 00:13

    This is a bit of equipment I built for this year's CHRISTMAS LECTURES, to discuss the

  • 00:16

    hazards of micrometeoroid impacts in space.

  • 00:23

    Whether this is with man-made stuff of natural micrometeroids.

  • 00:29

    Micrometeoroids are tiny specs of space dust which become very dangerous at high speeds.

  • 00:32

    So we built this bit of kit here to demonstrate that anything can be dangerous it it's going

  • 00:36

    fast enough.

  • 00:38

    Even a carrot.

  • 00:43

    Using this high-speed footage we were able to clock the carrots travelling at around

  • 00:47

    100 metres per second.

  • 00:48

    That's well over 300 km per hour...

  • 00:52

    which is more than enough velocity to obliterate a lightbulb, just in case you were wondering.

  • 01:01

    But the carrot is actually travelling pretty slowly compared to things orbiting the Earth.

  • 01:05

    The speed of something in a low earth orbit, like the International Space Station, is around

  • 01:10

    8km/s.

  • 01:10

    That's just under 28,000 km per hour, which is almost 100 times the speed of our carrot.

  • 01:17

    At this speeds, even specks of dust could be dangerous, posing a huge risk to astronauts

  • 01:21

    and spacecraft.

  • 01:22

    This crack in the window of the ISS is about 7mm in diameter, but is thought to be cause

  • 01:27

    by a tiny fleck of paint, no more than a few thousands of a mm across.

  • 01:32

    So what happens when matter collides at these extreme speeds and why does it become so dangerous?

  • 01:44

    First we need to consider what matter is.

  • 01:46

    That's easy, you might think: matter is made of atoms and molecules, right?

  • 01:50

    Well, yes and no. In a sense, matter as we're familiar with it is really formed of chemical

  • 01:54

    bonds.

  • 01:55

    It's the bonds that determine the properties of matter: how hard it is, how strong it is,

  • 01:59

    what it looks like.

  • 02:00

    So when objects collide, really it's the bonds that are interacting.

  • 02:04

    It's the bonds that absorb and transmit energy through the solid to determine the outcome.

  • 02:09

    Just about the strongest bonds of all are in diamonds.

  • 02:12

    Even this tiny thing would require about 12,000 Joules of energy to break all its chemical

  • 02:17

    bonds.

  • 02:18

    But even at a speed of 300 km/h, the speed of the carrot gun, its kinetic energy by comparison

  • 02:23

    would be less than 1 Joule,

  • 02:25

    and that's why we saw the carrot largely surviving earlier, because bonds take so much energy

  • 02:29

    to break,

  • 02:30

    and therefore dominate the way matter behaves in the low-speed world around us.

  • 02:33

    But at the much higher speeds of space, there's just so much more kinetic energy in play,

  • 02:38

    the relationship between speed and kinetic energy is a square relationship,

  • 02:42

    which means that if you're going 100 times as fast, you have 10,000 times as much kinetic

  • 02:46

    energy.

  • 02:48

    If this diamond were travelling at around 11 km/s, it would have a kinetic energy of

  • 02:52

    around 12,000 Joules.

  • 02:54

    So a collision at this energy would be enough in principle to break every single one of

  • 02:57

    its chemical bonds.

  • 03:00

    What this means is that the high energy collisions of space make solid matter behave in a way

  • 03:04

    that's wholly unfamiliar to us.

  • 03:06

    Chemical bonds suddenly become much less important because they're just not strong enough to

  • 03:09

    withstand the enormous energy that each atom carries into the collision.

  • 03:15

    Really we have to abandon to some extent the concept of a solid, because solidity as a

  • 03:19

    property of matter is completely dependent on bonding forces.

  • 03:24

    Essentially we have to consider objects as just a collection of unbound atoms, moving

  • 03:28

    along together.

  • 03:29

    As they collide, all of those atoms ricochet wildly off each other in all directions.

  • 03:34

    Also, because this surrounding material doesn't have time to get out of the way,

  • 03:38

    you end up with lots of atoms much closer together than they would normally be.

  • 03:42

    This creates huge pressure, which is a force that doesn't just act along the direction

  • 03:46

    of impact, but in all directions.

  • 03:47

    What I'm describing here is basically a high-energy explosion.

  • 03:52

    When we think of high-speed collisions it's easy to imagine something like a bullet punching

  • 03:58

    its way through a target, leaving a clean hole.

  • 04:04

    Instead you get this moving explosion, vaporising matter and blasting much bigger holes in things.

  • 04:09

    This test footage shows the result of a high velocity impact between a tiny stainless steel

  • 04:13

    ball and two aluminium plates.

  • 04:16

    The ball in only 6mm in diameter, but is travelling at a whopping 6.7km per second.

  • 04:22

    This is still slower than the orbital speed of the ISS.

  • 04:24

    Here you can see the dramatic impact of a 6.8km per second impact between a small aluminium

  • 04:30

    sphere and a piece of aluminium.

  • 04:31

    During these sorts of impacts, the pressure and temperature generated can exceed those

  • 04:36

    found at the centre of the Earth,

  • 04:38

    and this is why tiny specks of space dust pose such a risk in space.

  • 04:42

    So how do spacecraft protect themselves from impacts in space?

  • 04:45

    Interestingly, they still mostly use an idea devised by astronomer Fred Whipple in the

  • 04:49

    1940s, before the space age had really got started.

  • 04:52

    The Whipple shield takes advantage of the way impacts spread out in all directions,

  • 04:55

    like explosions.

  • 04:57

    Basically you have a wall made up of several layers. The outermost layer isn't intended

  • 05:03

    to stop the projectile, just vaporise it.

  • 05:06

    You then have this big gap before the next layer. This allowsd the vaporised cloud of

  • 05:10

    material to expand,

  • 05:12

    so that by the time it gets to this layer its energy and momentum are spread out over

  • 05:16

    a wide area and can be absorbed easily.

  • 05:21

    As we can see here, in the first instance with these two pieces of card together, the

  • 05:25

    carrot makes it through and obliterates the egg.

  • 05:27

    But with the spacing as in a Whipple shield, we do a lot better.

All

The example sentences of SOLIDITY in videos (5 in total of 5)

sort noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction solidity noun, singular or mass to to it personal pronoun but coordinating conjunction it personal pronoun is verb, 3rd person singular present n't adverb nearly adverb as adverb heavy adjective as preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner fxd proper noun, singular 80 cardinal number which wh-determiner means verb, 3rd person singular present that preposition or subordinating conjunction it personal pronoun
really adverb we personal pronoun have verb, non-3rd person singular present to to abandon verb, base form to to some determiner extent noun, singular or mass the determiner concept noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner solid adjective , because preposition or subordinating conjunction solidity noun, singular or mass as preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner
of preposition or subordinating conjunction consciousness noun, singular or mass it personal pronoun 's verb, 3rd person singular present still adverb kind noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction like preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner dream verb, base form it personal pronoun 's verb, 3rd person singular present just adverb the determiner more adjective, comparative solidity noun, singular or mass you personal pronoun
however adverb , this determiner hill noun, singular or mass is verb, 3rd person singular present called verb, past participle the determiner mountain noun, singular or mass , being verb, gerund or present participle only adverb about preposition or subordinating conjunction 400 cardinal number meters noun, plural high adjective , for preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner sake noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction bigger adjective, comparative solidity noun, singular or mass .
permanence noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction solidity noun, singular or mass to to the determiner home noun, singular or mass , a determiner sense noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction calm adjective which wh-determiner you personal pronoun just adverb ca modal n't adverb achieve verb, base form using verb, gerund or present participle

Use "solidity" in a sentence | "solidity" example sentences

How to use "solidity" in a sentence?

  • Ease and speed in doing a thing do not give the work lasting solidity or exactness of beauty.
    -Plutarch-
  • Compromise, if not the spice of life, is its solidity. It is what makes nations great and marriages happy
    -Phyllis McGinley-
  • Each atom of the Holy Spirit is intelligent, and like all other matter has solidity, form, and size, and occupies space.
    -Orson Pratt-
  • The abundance, the solidity, and the splendor of the results already achieved by science are well fitted to inspire us with a cheerful confidence in the soundness of its method.
    -James G. Frazer-
  • To an American, land is solidity, goodness, and hope. American history is about land.
    -William Least Heat-Moon-
  • Solidity, caution, integrity, efficiency. Lack of imagination, hypocrisy. These qualities characterize the middle classes in everycountry, but in England they are national characteristics.
    -E. M. Forster-
  • Commuters give the city its tidal restlessness, natives give it solidity and continuity, but the settlers give it passion.
    -E. B. White-
  • Books, in the plural lose their solidity of substance and become a gas, filling all available space.
    -John Derbyshire-

Definition and meaning of SOLIDITY

What does "solidity mean?"

/səˈlidədē/

noun
State of having the interior filled with matter.