Close up of an underwater underwater explosion at an impressive 120,000 frames per second
In fact or on film, the explosions happen very quickly, what we observe is just the sparks that flare up violently. So if it was filmed at 120,000 frames per second, how did that explosion happen?
In fact or on film, the explosions happen very quickly, what we observe is just the sparks that flare up violently. So if it was filmed at 120,000 frames per second, how did that explosion happen?
The slow motion video that captures the close-up of the underwater explosion at an impressive 120,000 frames per second below will give you the answer.
The boys of The Slo-Mo Guys channel on Youtube only use a small explosive and explode the experiment in the aquarium to record. But what was collected was enough to amaze you. The explosive block exploded with the deformation of the water, the fireball emitted. In fact, it only took less than 1 second, but at 120,000 frames per second, it was an extremely impressive performance.
You should read it
- Good for the fierce battle between 'fire god' and 'water god'
- Close-up shot of 'killer' of pistol shrimp, speed 97km / h
- Listed 10 most terrible experiments on animals
- Review Astral Chain - The battlefield is full of explosions
- Explosive grenades on land and underwater, where is more dangerous to humans?
- The secrets never revealed about Area 51, the top secret US military base
- Facebook apologizes to users for psychological experiments
- Amazon submits the invention of an underwater warehouse to maximize storage space
- 14 interesting facts about the universe amaze you
- Why can the refrigerator explode without warning?
- Laptop battery explosion: Nature and how to prevent it
- How to shoot strange underwater portraits without getting a hair wet