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  • - Hello, and welcome to another episode of the SciShow Talk Show.

  • Today, we have with me my friend Peter Winkler. Apparently I sing your name.

  • (Singing) Peter- - (Singing) I sing your name too.

  • - (Singing) Oh, that's lovely. - (Singing) Hank Green.

  • - What do you do here at SciShow, Peter?

  • - I run the graphics for SciShow.

  • - Yes. So, today Peter has come in with some interesting science things for us to discuss.

  • - So, right now the world of prosthetics has come out with a self-healing skin.

  • - So, like that would go on top of a fake arm or leg?

  • - It could. They say it could go on, like, the housings of wires and buildings.

  • - Oh, right. - So, that if it were to get cut it would go back together.

  • - So when my cat chews up my computer cord it would just, "Nyah, I'm fine" and everything would be okay.

  • - So let's say you're a robotic soldier from the future.

  • - They built me poorly.

  • - And if you were to say fight a person, I'm just going to pull a name out of the air, John Connor.

  • - Okay. - And you-

  • - I can- I can- I'm starting to feel the part. I'm starting to feel my endoskeleton.

  • - And then you get into a shotgun battle with him, and then half of your skin is gone.

  • So now at this point, it would be good to have some self-healing skin.

  • - If I were to get into a shotgun battle as a normal human, I would probably want to have some self-healing skin.

  • Which I guess I do, I guess I do have self-healing skin. Which is nice.

  • - Yeah, it is good. The difference between that and, uh,

  • like your own skin and this skin is that it heals in about thirty minutes.

  • - That would be better. - Yeah.

  • It actually bonds together that quick.

  • So, I mean if you're talking about, just, polymers sticking together, like Silly Putty,

  • like you take Silly Putty apart and push it back together and then it's Silly Putty.

  • So what's the difference, why don't they just smooth out some Silly Putty and put it over Arnold Schwarzenegger?

  • - Well, it's a little bit different because it, uh,

  • you know, with Silly Putty you would need for someone to actually mold it back together.

  • - Oh, right. - This, if you were to put them next to each other,

  • they actually have positive and negative bonds that are going against each other, that actually will-

  • - Like reforming chemical bonds.

  • - Right, and they can take on electricity and so-

  • - Right, and so it can conduct. Do you know how they do that? How they-

  • - They added, um, I think it's, they added nickel into it.

  • - So, like just little pieces of nickel.

  • - So, with the little pieces of nickel it can also be set up as a sensor,

  • so the closer those nickel elements are together-

  • So, like if you compressed it, it would be able to tell it was being compressed.

  • - Right.

  • - Because the conductivity would change. That's awesome. - Right.

  • - Yeah. It's pretty interesting, especially if you were to have a prosthetic arm or something,

  • - because then it could even sense how far you're twisting, like if this-

  • - Right, you could know if your arm was bent or unbent,

  • or you could know if you're touching something. You could know how hard you're touching something.

  • - Right. - Be able to actually have a surrogate for the sense of touch.

  • That's amazing!

  • - Yeah. And who knows what they can do with it, you know, as time goes by. Maybe it will actually be able to feel.

  • - Yeah, if you could integrate with the nervous system which is,

  • ooh that's when you start to get into Arnold Schwarzenegger. Robot army from the future stuff.

  • - I know. Scary stuff, but good for people who need it.

  • - Yeah, that's really cool. Thank you. - You are welcome.

  • - And now we move on to today's addition of "Stump Hank!"

  • - Will Saturn's rings ever disappear and turn into a moon outside of Saturn itself?

  • - So, the stability of Saturn's rings? I know that Saturn's rings are made of ice.

  • I know that Saturn's rings move around, that they are not static;

  • they're moving pieces that are bumping into each other.

  • So, if they're floating around out there you would think that eventually they would start to clump.

  • And they probably do already clump to a certain extent because everything has gravity;

  • even very small objects have gravity.

  • So, you would think they would start to clump together,

  • and as they clump together more they would run into each other and the friction would increase

  • and it would melt eventually and then it would - I don't know how much mass is in Saturn's rings,

  • I certainly don't know. But they would clump together and if enough clumped together,

  • then it would melt and it would form a sphere, because of gravity.

  • So, I'm gonna say yes.

  • - Actually, no! - Ahhh!

  • - The rings that are made out of water ice are actually not dense enough to actually go and create

  • something like that. So the gravitational effects of Saturn, and there's also the title forces-

  • - Right, between Saturn and other moons? - Right. Between the other, yeah.

  • They- The way that they orbit actually prevents anything from actually forming itself.

  • - So it's the effects of Saturn's other moons that keep clumps from forming, basically.

  • - Pretty much.

  • - And I do know that there are actually little bands in Saturn's rings where there is no ice

  • because there are sort of little moon-lets in there that collect up,

  • with their gravity, they collect up all the little pieces of ice in that area.

  • But I guess that makes sense. I guess that makes sense. I was wrong.

  • Well, now it is time for something creepy and crawly to join us here.

  • - Oh yeah?

  • - Apparently, Peter, you're going to be our gross animal expert.

  • - You know, as long as it's not spiders. I have terrible arachnophobia.

  • - Is that for all arachnids? - Pretty much.

  • - So how would you feel about a scorpion?

  • - Uh, not good?

  • - Okay, well let's bring out the scorpion! - Wait.

  • - You'll be fine! Y-You'll be fine. - Oh, okay, good.

  • - And now we have Jessi from Animal Wonders visiting with us again

  • with another strange and mystical creature, underneath the coconut.

  • Like, which coconut is it under? It's under this one. - Surprise!

  • - Alright, unveil the coconut, please. I'm gonna keep my hands well back.

  • Hello! What do we have here?

  • - This is Professor Claw the emperor scorpion. - Professor Claw!

  • - Sounds like something from, like, a G.I. Joe- - Yeah.

  • - Well wasn't it Dr. Claw, from Inspector Gadget?

  • - Yes! It was. - With the cat.

  • - The metal hand, yeah. So this thing will, uh, will this kill me?

  • - If you get stung, no, no.

  • And actually you can tell if a scorpion is more dangerous by the size of their claws there.

  • So his claws are pretty big. - I would call that big.

  • - The bigger they are, the less poisonous they are.

  • - Okay, well then I'm not worried at all.

  • - You should be a little worried. - Oh.

  • It'll feel about like a bee sting.

  • - Oh okay. - You won't have the stinger actually in you,

  • but it will throb and it'll burn and it'll hurt

  • for about, you know, a couple days. - Well, now I just want to try that!

  • If it's just a bee sting, I can then for the rest of my life, I can say I was stung by an emperor scorpion.

  • Does that not sound cool to you? - To say you were stung by a scorpion?

  • - I'm not actually going to do it.

  • - You would increase as a badass by, at least, by 10 percent.

  • - Ten percent more badass. - Ah, it's moving!

  • - It's alright.

  • - I want to point out that she has a glove.

  • Oh, it's going towards you.

  • - I'm just gonna head on back.

  • Yeah, now my badass level has significantly decreased.

  • - And it's caught on video. - I felt like as soon as he started moving he got way bigger.

  • Was that just my imagination?

  • - He will curl up in defensive mode, and he'll actually become smaller when he's a little bit nervous.

  • - Okay, so his plates actually extend.

  • - Yup, and you can actually see on the side there, if you felt that gray skin on the side,

  • I'm not asking you to, it feels like velvet. It's very very soft.

  • So they can actually expand and shrink using that soft skin. - Neat.

  • Well, what's going in there? Are they filling up with air? - They'll fill up with food.

  • - Oh, when you feed it! - And the female will have to expand to hold all of her eggs inside as well.

  • - No, stay away from me.

  • - He seems very well behaved. - Scorpions do have personalities.

  • And we actually have, Professor Claw and Mrs. Black share an enclosure.

  • So Mrs. Black actually is not as fun to bring out on shows because she's a bit grouchier.

  • So they do actually have personalities. - Interesting. Are they the same species? - They are.

  • He's pretty good, he's pretty good.

  • - You think you have to go to Thailand to get this sort of action. Actually, that's probably way off.

  • Where are these from? - These guys are from Africa.

  • - From Africa, okay.

  • - See how he holds his claws up in front of him as he goes? - What is that for?

  • - Just to keep them out of the way.

  • He also has really small hairs, if you look really closely

  • you can see all those, they're almost like copper colored hairs.

  • Now, they're not actually hairs like our hair.

  • It's made of the same stuff that makes their exoskeleton, so it's part of their skeleton. - The chitin.

  • - And if you blow on them,...

  • - "Ooh, what was that?" - They can feel it.

  • - Are you gonna go hide? - "I wanna go in my pineapple!" What?

  • - Where are you going? You coming toward me again?

  • - How many legs do you see?

  • - One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten?

  • I don't know if the claws count as legs. - They don't.

  • What is he classified- - He would be an arachnid then. - Yeah.

  • Yup, just like a spider. - Just like a spider. So it's basically a spider but way scarier.

  • - Spider, crab, wasp, put together. - Spidercrabwasp. - Yeah.

  • - Why did nature do that? - Because it's pretty cool.

  • - It is pretty cool.

  • Well, Professor Claw, thank you very much for being here with us on this SciSchow, AHHH-

  • - Okay!

  • - SciSchow Talk Show. And Jessi from Animal Wonders, thank you as well.

  • - Thank you for having me. - Their website is animalwonders.org.

  • And we'll see you next time. - Thank you.

  • - Sorry to subject you to Professor Claw, Peter,

  • but thank you for joining us on today's episode of SciShow Talk Show.

  • - Thank you, thank you.

- Hello, and welcome to another episode of the SciShow Talk Show.

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