An induction heater uses alternating magnetic fields to heat magnetic and conductive objects, such as a fork, to red-hot temperatures in under 30 seconds, even though the coil itself remains cool enough to touch.
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Dead batteries bounce higher than full batteries... #Shorts #sciencephong309Added:
This is an induction heater. Even though the coil is not abnormally hot and I can actually touch it, it uses alternating magnetic fields to heat any magnetic and conductive object like this fork to red hot temperatures in under 30 seconds.
There's 13 nuts tied on one side and one nut on the other. If I raise the heavier side up and then let go of the side with one nut, the heavier side will actually not hit the ground.
If I take a green laser pointer and shine it onto a canvas that has been coated in glow-in-the-dark paint, the laser pointer will charge the canvas and you can see the drawing when the light is turned off.
You've seen all three videos now. Pause the vote in the comments which one you thought was fake. The induction heater does heat objects that quickly and it's such an awesome device that I made a separate video that walks you through how to assemble it, which I'll link in the comments. It turns out this video was fake. While it is possible to charge a glow-in-the-dark canvas with the laser pointer, if you want to do so with a small handheld laser pointer, you need one that emits blue light, not green.
This is the last episode in season 1 of Two Truths and a Trash, but I'll start season 2 in early 2023. I'm considering adding a none of the videos were fake and multiple videos were fake options in season 2 to make things more challenging, so let me know in the comments if you like that idea.
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