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History of Technology 1: Energy Sources 75 Views
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Description:
Here comes the sun, doo doo doo doo… Seriously, it gives us energy so we don’t die. We’re hoping it keeps on coming.
Transcript
- 00:03
The earth is almost a closed system in terms of energy science. [wire connects planets]
- 00:08
Except for some space junk and asteroids, barely anything affects the energy level [alien hovers near Earth]
- 00:13
of the earth. There's one teeny tiny exception, of course: energy from the Sun. [Sun pictured]
- 00:18
Well, the Sun is actually a reactor that generates nuclear energy 24x7. Well
- 00:24
some of that energy reaches the Earth in the form of light, heat, and radiation. [energy moves to earth]
Full Transcript
- 00:27
Think about it: The Sun releases energy in every direction, only a small portion [energy from sun pictured]
- 00:32
hits us, but that amount is enough to power our entire planet. For the longest
- 00:38
time, solar power was the only power. The first squiggly little bacterium on the [person puts out solar panels]
- 00:43
planet lived by converting sunlight into energy. Well today, all life on the planet [plants convert sunlight]
- 00:47
either converts sunlight to energy directly, like plants, or eats stuff that
- 00:52
does, like animals. Even if we weren't aware of it at the time, most of our [deer eats plant]
- 00:56
technological history has been devoted to accessing the sun's energy more [people discuss invention]
- 01:00
efficiently. The sun's heat causes the wind, which powers our windmills, right? [windmills pictured]
- 01:05
Coal is just condensed dead trees which stored up sunlight for hundreds of years
- 01:10
before shrinking into little black nubs. Oh, and fossil fuels like oil are [coal pictured]
- 01:16
basically jellified animals from millions of years ago. And yeah, animal [animal jelly]
- 01:21
jelly isn't the prettiest picture or even in the running for top 10 [animal jelly in museum]
- 01:24
prettiest pictures, but hopefully the bigger picture is becoming clear. All the
- 01:28
energy we can access here on earth came from the Sun if we trace it back far [energy storytelling]
- 01:32
enough. So, let's take a second to see how humans have gotten at the sun's energy
- 01:36
over time. Well, back in the hunter-gatherer age, it was mostly about [man lassoes energy]
- 01:40
eating. Nope, humans didn't directly eat sunlight, though that would have saved us [person eats light]
- 01:45
a lot of trouble. But plants captured the sun's energy, and humans ate plants, along [energy cycle shown]
- 01:50
with animals that ate plants, or animals that ate other animals, which probably ate
- 01:55
plants, which basically ate sunlight. Well, hunter-gatherers took the energy they
- 02:00
got from eating and used it to do all their hunter-gathering hobbies, which of
- 02:04
course mostly consisted of hunting, gathering, and the occasional public art [cave person in museum]
- 02:09
project. Another big source of energy for hunter-gatherers became fire. [person lights fire]
- 02:13
Early fire use let us burn up stored solar energy when and where we needed it.
- 02:18
Mostly, this was for heat, light, and cooking. When we move on to the
- 02:22
agricultural craftsman age, we find humans using both wind and water energy. [wind and water energy pictured]
- 02:28
Windmills and watermills tap the energy of, yes, you guessed it, moving wind
- 02:33
and water to save humans some sweat. Well, later the agricultural craftspeople
- 02:38
added coal and coke. Coal wasn't a very big deal before the steam engine, but it [coal and coke pictured]
- 02:44
was useful as a kind of super-condensed firewood. Coke was a refined coal which
- 02:49
burned even hotter and powered furnaces to make iron. It also tasted terrible with
- 02:54
burgers and fries. Once the Industrial Age hit, it was all about steam. Steam [person bites into coke]
- 02:59
engines relied on heating up water and using the resulting steam to move gears
- 03:03
and pistons. Well, at first they were just fancy water pumps, but steam engines were [steam engines pictured]
- 03:08
in everything from trains to factories before long. Steam power could be
- 03:12
used to turn a turbine and produce electricity. Well, like steam, electricity [steam engine diagram]
- 03:17
started out small but eventually pervaded everyday life. Fossil fuels
- 03:21
like petroleum, natural gas, and coal became really useful with the invention
- 03:25
of the internal combustion engine. Most notably, the fossil fuels revolutionized [engine pictured]
- 03:30
transportation. They're in cars, planes, and in cocktails at automaton bars. And once [robot drinks]
- 03:36
we hit the post-industrial age, things so nuclear. Nuclear power is our first big [nuclear blast]
- 03:40
step away from our reliance on the sun's energy. Well, it's a way of harnessing the
- 03:45
energy that holds an atom's nucleus together. As a power source, it's been [nuclear power demonstrated]
- 03:49
used to fuel electric plant. These days, there's also a push for newer, renewable
- 03:54
sources of energy. Renewable energies include solar cells, fancy new [renewable energy pictured]
- 03:59
wind turbines, biofuels, and geothermal. But they still make up a small amount of
- 04:04
the world's total energy production. Of course, considering where we've come in [energy production diagram]
- 04:09
such a short amount of time, anything seems possible, right? A cave person would
- 04:14
have thought the best use of a solar panel would be to eat it. We've come a [cave person eats solar panel]
- 04:18
long way.
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