Popping Candy (reacting in water) #2 - a micro video (with sound) by M.A.R.
This video shows 'normal motion' (actually slowed down by a fraction per second) with added (actual recorded) sound. This is a slightly longer version of a previously uploaded micro-video (without slow motion added)
A 1.5 - 2 mm piece of 'popping candy' is dosed in water; VIDEO recorded using a digital wi-fi 'microscope' (a 'fixed-focus eyeglass') at (less than) x50 {probably x10 - x20; note: title card is inaccurate}.
The AUDIO is a bit of an artifice: multiple pieces of candy were place in a 3 and 1/2 inch (7.25 cm) diameter sauce bowl, approx. 2 mL of water was added with an eye-dropper, and a hand-held digital recorder was placed in the dish about 1 inch (2.5 cm) above the soaked candy. I waited through a minute of candy crackling noise until the first loud 'pop' (signaling a critical structural failure of a piece of candy's sugary 'shell', rapidly releasing its compressed CO2 gas) then edited the audio and lined it up with the video. I like to imagine the 'smaller' pops (heard throughout) are the sounds of all the micro-bubbles popping (note: I lack the high-sensitivity audio tech to record and amplify those micro-acoustics from a single piece of candy).
Видео Popping Candy (reacting in water) #2 - a micro video (with sound) by M.A.R. канала M. Ricciardi
A 1.5 - 2 mm piece of 'popping candy' is dosed in water; VIDEO recorded using a digital wi-fi 'microscope' (a 'fixed-focus eyeglass') at (less than) x50 {probably x10 - x20; note: title card is inaccurate}.
The AUDIO is a bit of an artifice: multiple pieces of candy were place in a 3 and 1/2 inch (7.25 cm) diameter sauce bowl, approx. 2 mL of water was added with an eye-dropper, and a hand-held digital recorder was placed in the dish about 1 inch (2.5 cm) above the soaked candy. I waited through a minute of candy crackling noise until the first loud 'pop' (signaling a critical structural failure of a piece of candy's sugary 'shell', rapidly releasing its compressed CO2 gas) then edited the audio and lined it up with the video. I like to imagine the 'smaller' pops (heard throughout) are the sounds of all the micro-bubbles popping (note: I lack the high-sensitivity audio tech to record and amplify those micro-acoustics from a single piece of candy).
Видео Popping Candy (reacting in water) #2 - a micro video (with sound) by M.A.R. канала M. Ricciardi
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18 сентября 2024 г. 0:01:41
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