The Science of Singing, Sharks, Electricity, and Mars on Earth | FULL EPISODE | S4
Mission Unstoppable
0:03 I'm Miranda Cosgrove and this is Mission [music] Unstoppable.
0:07 Coming up, do re mi, so you want to know more about the science behind singing?
0:12 Can we work on a little tune together?
0:14 [music] Sure.
0:15 And I spill the STEM tea about the ocean's fiercest [music] predators.
0:19 Have you not been getting my daily shark facts emails?
0:22 Then is water the natural enemy of electricity?
0:26 Chemist Tamara has the answers.
0:27 Let's test it.
0:29 Plus, if you think this is Mars, you're only [music] 85 million miles off.
0:34 Are we fishing for something?
0:35 What lies beneath the soil [music] in this California landscape?
0:39 Get ready to meet the scientists, inventors,
0:42 and heroes who help make our world a better place.
0:46 The future is here.
0:48 The mission unstoppable.
0:54 So why do some voices [music] sound like this and other voices like this?
0:59 And how come New Yorkers sound [music] like, "Hey, I'm walking here.
1:03 Pizza pie.
1:05 Go Yankees." I don't know.
1:08 But I bet our next [music] guest can answer at least one of those questions.
1:14 STEM STEM STEM STEM STEM STEM STEM Woo, something is not right.
1:21 [music] How do those singers do it?
1:23 I wonder if there's some science that could help.
1:26 On the field, court,
1:28 [music]
1:27 or rink, an athlete needs to learn how to train their muscles for the big game.
1:32 Same goes for a singer.
1:33 They need to [music] train their muscle
1:35 or their vocal cords for their performance.
1:38 To find out more about how singers [music] get in peak performance,
1:41 I'm talking to Anna Flavia Zuin,
1:44 associate music professor at NYU, who is a vocologist,
1:48 someone who studies [music] the science behind the voice.
1:51 I started playing piano when I was eight and I actually got
1:54 into voice science because I decided to go to a doctor and ask,
1:58 "How does a voice work?" Because I saw a lot of voice teachers that were
2:01 giving a lot of information and in my head it didn't make a lot of sense.
2:05 So I asked, "How does it work?
2:06 How does it function?" And there's a lot of misconception about the voice.
2:10 So I wanted [music] to understand more to help singers that were
2:14 not really capable of fully comprehending [music] that they are the instrument.
2:19 And that instrument is a singer's vocal folds or vocal cords.
2:23 These are two bands of smooth tissue [music] found in the voice box.
2:27 As air leaves the lungs and passes through the larynx,
2:30 the vocal cords vibrate, which produces the sound of your voice.
2:34 And as a vocologist, Dr.
2:35 Zuin [music] specializes in knowing how
2:37 to best develop and protect a singer's instrument.
2:40 What do you get to do in your day-to-day job?
2:42 I got to work with so many talented singers [music] and part of what I do
2:47 is help them strategize how to maintain their voices
2:50 while they're performing [music] in shows and productions.
2:53 So what research are you working on right now?
2:55 So I'm working on a study that has [music]
2:57 to do with calculating the vocal dose of a Broadway singer,
3:00 meaning how much are they singing in a particular
3:03 show and to figure out how much is too much.
3:06 Anna uses a dosimeter to monitor how a singer
3:08 uses their voice over a [music] certain period of time.
3:11 It consists of a transducer,
3:13 which is a contact microphone or accelerometer, and a digital recorder.
3:18 After the dosimeter is calibrated [music] to the singer's voice, Ah.
3:23 Ah.
3:25 Two.
3:27 Ah.
3:28 Ah.
3:30 And third time's [music] the charm.
3:32 Ah.
3:33 Ah.
3:34 Well done.
3:37 [laughter]
3:37 The singer wears the dosimeter [music] for a period of time
3:40 and data is collected on how a singer uses their voice.
3:43 Anna can then determine what type of athletic training a singer needs.
3:46 [music] So when training a singer, I try to work on goals.
3:52 There are an array of exercises that we
3:54 do including lip bubbles and lip trills and working
3:58 with a straw in your mouth [music]
4:00 and coming up with more articulation from the tongue,
4:02 releasing tension from the neck,
4:04 and [music] all sorts of things that are part of this coordination
4:09 of an entire system that allows the vocal
4:11 folds to vibrate more freely and easily.
4:14 It really bothers me when people say that somebody got
4:16 a voice injury because [music] they're bad at vocal technique.
4:21 That is simply not true and we are trying to work
4:23 very hard [music] to try and understand a little bit more
4:26 how things happen and that we can equip more singers
4:30 to be capable of taking care of the longevity of their careers.
4:34 Thank you so much, Anna,
4:35 for teaching me that there's so much biology and physiology behind singing.
4:39 I wouldn't have known that there was so much science behind the voice.
4:43 You're more than welcome.
4:44 Thank you for the opportunity to share with you.
4:46 Do you have a request before I go?
4:48 Can we work on a little tune together?
4:51 Sure.
4:52 Um, shall I give you a key?
4:54 Yes, let's do it.
4:55 How about here?
4:59 [music]
4:59 STEM STEM [singing] STEM STEM STEM STEM STEM STEM STEM [music] STEM STEM STEM
5:04 STEM STEM STEM STEM STEM STEM STEM
5:07 [singing] STEM STEM STEM Mission Unstoppable [music] [laughter]
5:21 Did you know that sharks don't have bones?
5:23 How about the fact that sharks have a sixth sense?
5:26 No?
5:27 Have you not been getting my daily shark facts emails?
5:30 Check your spam.
5:31 Actually, [music] there's no time for that.
5:33 I'll just do it now.
5:34 I hope you're thirsty for knowledge cuz I'm here to spill the STEM tea.
5:46 The Greenland shark can live for hundreds of years,
5:49 250 to 500 years to be exact.
5:52 That's a lot of years.
5:54 So how do they live so long and how can I get in on it?
5:58 One theory is that Greenland sharks have a super [music] slow metabolism,
6:01 which causes them to grow at a really slow rate, less than 1 cm a year,
6:06 and allows them to go for long periods of time without food.
6:09 Its [music] flesh also contains the toxic substance trimethylamine,
6:14 which if ingested [music] can make you really sick.
6:17 So that really helps with the whole getting eaten thing.
6:20 No wonder sharks have been around for almost half a billion years.
6:23 No, really.
6:24 They're older than trees.
6:26 And you can't be around that long if
6:28 you don't have [music] super teeth like sharks do.
6:30 On average, sharks have between 50 and 300 teeth in their mouth
6:34 at a time that they grow [music] throughout their lives.
6:37 A new set of teeth are always growing inside the shark's jaws,
6:40 rotating like a built-in conveyor belt.
6:42 Sharks go through a mind-blowing 25,000 [music] to 35,000 teeth in a lifetime.
6:49 But how do sharks take care of those teeth?
6:51 Do they have little fish dentists?
6:53 Not exactly.
6:54 Some sharks' teeth are coated in an acid-resistant enamel
6:57 that makes cavities virtually impossible for them to get.
7:00 That's probably for the best.
7:02 Can't imagine a hammerhead in a dentist's chair.
7:05 So what exactly do they eat with those cavity-free teeth?
7:08 It can range from [music] the diet of fish eggs,
7:10 krill, crab larva to fish, seals, whales, and even other sharks.
7:16 Sharks don't just eat in the sunlight zone.
7:18 Sharks also eat and live in the deep ocean.
7:21 So what types of sharks can you find down there?
7:24 This is where things get spooky.
7:26 Down in [music] the dark depths of the ocean,
7:28 you can find goblin sharks whose mouths are filled with jagged
7:33 teeth literally coming out of their heads to eat their prey.
7:36 Oh, and the cookiecutter shark.
7:39 But don't be fooled.
7:40 They don't look like little cookies that swim around.
7:43 Their name is far more sinister.
7:45 These sharks get their name from the round bite left behind on their prey,
7:50 which yep, you got it.
7:52 It looks like a round cookie.
7:54 I love cookies, but not that much.
7:57 There are more than a thousand [music] species
7:58 of sharks and rays with new species discovered every year.
8:02 So there's so much more we can learn from them.
8:04 But the number of sharks found in the [music]
8:06 open oceans has plunged by 71% over half a century.
8:10 What can we do to help them?
8:11 According to studies, the best way to help is to not overfish.
8:15 We're a lot more dangerous to sharks [music] than they are to us.
8:18 So we should help save them because I'm still holding out
8:21 hope that they'll find a shark and name it after me.
8:24 Preferably not one [music] that looks like a goblin shark though.
8:27 I want a cute one.
8:31 [music] Why is water so good for fish, yet so bad for phones?
8:37 We can't ask the fish [music]
8:39 and my phone and I aren't really on speaking terms.
8:41 She knows what she did.
8:43 So we'll have to get our answers from chemist Tamara Yuwing.
8:48 We've all been there, [music] falling in the pool,
8:50 texting in the tub, and losing your grip.
8:52 You drop your phone in the water and you lose everything you love.
8:55 You did back it up to the cloud, right?
8:58 And we all know water is bad for electronics, but is it?
9:06 My name is Tamara.
9:07 I'm a chemist and today I'm going to show
9:09 you the science of what makes this possible.
9:16 We'll start with this little bot,
9:18 our electronic device and current sacrifice to science.
9:21 It lights up, blinks, it has exposed wires, it even moves.
9:28 [music] Nothing is less waterproof than this.
9:29 When I drop this in water, common sense it'll stop working, right?
9:33 Well, let's test it.
9:35 In front of me I have two bowls of water.
9:37 One is regular old tap water and the other
9:39 one is filled with distilled or purified water.
9:42 Let's start with the tap.
9:44 Bot is on.
9:48 Slowly giving up.
9:50 RIP to this little bot.
9:52 You served science well.
9:57 [bell] But when we add a bot distilled water, look at her go.
10:00 Unfazed, untroubled, in charge, or maintaining charge.
10:05 So, why does this happen?
10:07 Is all water not created equal?
10:09 It turns out that it's not the water
10:11 itself that [music] conducts electricity and ruins electronics.
10:14 Pure H2O is actually a pretty good insulator,
10:17 meaning that it doesn't really conduct electricity.
10:19 It's the ions and impurities in the water that allow
10:22 for electrons to move and for electricity to be conducted.
10:26 Compounds like sodium and magnesium chlorides,
10:29 even acid [music] and bases in solution,
10:30 fall under a category of what we call electrolytes.
10:33 These are charged ions that can allow electricity to sort of jump around.
10:38 When we turn on our devices,
10:40 we allow electrons to flow through the internal circuits,
10:43 which is how, in the case of our bot here, we see the lights flashing.
10:47 But, when we introduce electrolytes, the electrons tend to go to places they're
10:51 not supposed to, like the ions in solution,
10:53 causing short circuits and the bot to no longer work.
10:56 Let me show you.
10:57 This is a multimeter.
10:59 It's a device that measures electricity.
11:01 And when we put it in distilled water,
11:02 you'll see that we don't get any reading,
11:04 because electricity is not being conducted.
11:07 But, when I put it in the tap water, you actually get a fluctuating reading.
11:11 Distilling water removes the ions from the liquid
11:14 and therefore removes the ability for it to conduct electricity.
11:17 When I put the probes back in the distilled water and stick my hand in there,
11:22 the ions from my hand are actually making the water more conductive.
11:25 [music] And that's because the ions
11:27 on my hands are getting dissolved in the water.
11:29 Throughout the day, our hands do collect salt and other particles,
11:32 but when we rinse them in distilled water,
11:34 that's what's making it more conductive.
11:36 Now, this doesn't mean that the tap water is dirty,
11:38 just that the tap water hasn't had any ions or trace minerals removed from it.
11:42 In fact, our bodies really need micro amounts
11:45 of the ions that exist in the tap water,
11:47 so it's good that there are some in there.
11:49 So, next time you're going to lose your grip on your phone over some water,
11:53 try to be over some distilled water.
11:55 It's an expensive bath, but it might be worth it.
11:57 That's all for me.
11:58 See you next time.
12:03 What's this next [music] guest up to?
12:05 I hope something good, or I'm going to be embarrassed.
12:08 Our record is flawless up till now.
12:11 Let's find out.
12:13 This landscape might look like a moonscape,
12:16 but it's really a huge quarry in Southern
12:18 California filled with a lot of potential.
12:21 Up ahead is Allison Everhardt.
12:23 She's a geologist and environmental manager for CalPortland,
12:27 a construction materials company.
12:29 I was the kid that was always playing with different rocks and minerals.
12:33 I actually had a diary that had
12:35 the chemical compositions of a bunch of different minerals.
12:39 Now, Allison [music] gets to oversee mining operations from start to finish.
12:44 Hi, Allison.
12:45 Hi, Marina.
12:46 Nice to meet you.
12:47 Nice to meet you.
12:48 Cool.
12:48 What are you doing?
12:49 I'm marking this hole to be drilled.
12:51 Oh, with that thing?
12:53 Yep.
12:54 Oh, amazing, but like what for?
12:56 So, today we are going to be blasting for limestone.
12:59 Oh, wow.
13:00 Is it all that surrounds us here?
13:03 Yes, this whole quarry is full of it.
13:05 This looks amazing, but why do we even need limestone?
13:09 Limestone is [music] used to make cement,
13:11 which is the main ingredient in concrete.
13:13 Uh-huh.
13:13 And concrete is the second most used material.
13:17 So, we're going to drill the hole,
13:18 and then after that, we can go down and load the ANFO in the hole,
13:22 which is ammonium nitrate and fuel oil.
13:24 Oh, man, this sounds so cool.
13:27 If you're ready, I'm ready to rock.
13:30 Let's roll.
13:34 There's a lot of science behind a mining explosion.
13:38 First, the blast pattern is mapped out by a computer.
13:40 It also determines the size of the holes a giant drill
13:44 makes for the explosives [music] and how much rock will be displaced.
13:48 Now, what?
13:48 Now, we're going to prime the holes.
13:50 So, we're going to take this blasting cap,
13:53 [music] and there is a primer right here on the end.
13:55 Are we fishing for something?
13:57 No, actually, we're going to make [music] this thing explode.
14:01 Okay, great.
14:03 Yes.
14:02 I'm ready.
14:02 I'm excited.
14:04 After Allison feeds the primer into the booster,
14:07 I help lower it into a hole 42 ft deep.
14:10 Oh my gosh, fire in the hole in later, hopefully.
14:14 Yes.
14:15 This cord is going to carry the electric charge
14:17 that will um spark the booster and [music] explode the ANFO.
14:22 Great.
14:22 Going to take this rock and wrap it around.
14:26 Looks safe.
14:27 Looks stable.
14:28 Put it there.
14:30 Dunzo?
14:31 Yes.
14:32 The next step is a crucial one.
14:36 [music] Allison bobs a weighted tape measuring 15 ft into the hole,
14:39 while I guide a snorkel from a bulk truck
14:41 as it dumps the ANFO explosive up to the measured depth.
14:45 That's it.
14:46 I did it.
14:47 Ah, that was the most important part, right?
14:51 Yes.
14:51 It's almost big blast time.
14:53 A Bobcat comes through to fill the hole
14:55 with rocks as we head off to a safe distance.
14:59 So, do you want me to be a part of this, or is that like dangerous?
15:02 I'm going to need your help for safety reasons.
15:04 Okay, cool.
15:05 So, as I let off the detonator, Mhm.
15:07 I am going to have you talk into this radio.
15:11 Yeah.
15:11 You're going to be in charge of counting down the 5 [music] 4 3 2 1,
15:14 and then your loudest fire in the hole.
15:16 You ready?
15:17 part.
15:17 Yes.
15:19 5 4 3 2 1 Fire IN THE HOLE!
15:29 WHOA!
15:30 OH, that's so cool!
15:32 Whoa, you can totally feel it on the ground.
15:34 That's crazy.
15:36 Feels [music] like an earthquake.
15:38 That's wild.
15:39 Oh, absolutely.
15:40 Wow.
15:41 That's what 12,000 lb of explosives will do.
15:44 Are you guys hiring?
15:45 Talk to me after [music] this.
15:48 After the all clear, I learn how to test a rock to confirm [music] if it is
15:52 in fact limestone by dropping a tiny amount of hydrochloric acid on it.
15:57 After putting on some safety gloves, of course.
15:59 Go ahead and drip it right here.
16:03 I'm scared.
16:05 So, how will I know this is limestone?
16:07 What should happen?
16:08 It will fizz very [music] violently.
16:11 Okay.
16:11 Whoo, very violently.
16:12 Nice.
16:12 All right, here we go.
16:15 Ooh, it is happening.
16:17 Wow.
16:18 We've struck limestone.
16:20 Yes.
16:21 Oh, man.
16:21 It's not science without some fizz.
16:23 After grabbing some sample rocks, we head to the lab.
16:27 Oh, wow, cool.
16:30 This is the lab?
16:31 Yes, this is our last step today, where my job ends and the chemist job begins.
16:35 Oh, wow.
16:36 So, what happens to these?
16:37 [music] So, now they are going to analyze
16:40 the chemical composition of these rocks for quality control purposes.
16:44 Today's been so awesome.
16:46 The explosion was amazing,
16:48 and there's so much science involved today that I had no idea about.
16:52 I'm not really going to take anything I learned today for granted.
16:57 Thank you so much.
16:58 Of course.
17:06 Welcome back.
17:07 Before we go, we have one [music] last thing.
17:10 My advice for the youth is truly follow your passion
17:13 and listen to the questions that are in your head.
17:16 I never thought that I was going to have
17:17 a path that led me to where I'm at today,
17:20 and probably I wouldn't have gotten here if it wasn't
17:23 for asking the questions that my brain was prompting me to.
17:26 That curiosity really can take you [music]
17:29 to a direction that unfolds your destiny,
17:31 and however and whatever environment that may be, in whatever field that may be.
17:35 So, follow that path and trust [music] that what you bring to the world,
17:39 only you can bring, and nobody else.
17:42 One piece of advice I have for the younger
17:43 generation wanting to get into STEM careers,
17:46 once you find your passion, chase it fearlessly, regardless of what others say.
17:51 As I was growing up, many people doubted me.
17:53 They said I would have to act or look
17:55 a certain way to be successful in a STEM career, and I told them differently.
17:59 I like to have my nails done, do my makeup and my hair,
18:02 and I still come to work every day and get the job done.
18:06 That's it for Mission Unstoppable.
18:09 Tune in next time when we try to use
18:11 science [music] to get me to dunk a basketball,
18:13 and it doesn't even work a little.
18:15 Bye.
19:06 If you're watching this, you must have really liked the video.
19:09 Make sure you follow and subscribe,
19:10 [music] and check out these other videos that are even better.
19:13 No, really.
19:15 I've seen this one over a hundred [music] times.