Skip to player
Skip to main content
Search
Connect
Watch fullscreen
Like
Bookmark
Share
More
Add to Playlist
Report
Tiny Worm Flash Mob Caught Under the Microscope
Live Science
Follow
5 minutes ago
Vinegar eel "flash mob" caught under the microscope! Researchers were stunned when they measured the force of the roiling worm swarm.
Category
🤖
Tech
Transcript
Display full video transcript
00:00
A single droplet of water rests under a microscope, but this tiny sea is far from calm.
00:06
Thousands of squiggly white worms known as nematodes, or more specifically vinegar eels,
00:12
surge through the droplet, gathering at its center and running laps around its edges.
00:17
Scientists have discovered more than 25,000 species of nematodes living all over the world,
00:23
each of them with their own quirks.
00:25
And for the vinegar eels, that quirk is dancing.
00:28
Like birds or fish, vinegar eels travel in swarms.
00:33
When scientists watched these nematodes swim under the microscope,
00:36
they saw the eels move randomly around the droplet at first, but after an hour, a strange order emerged.
00:42
The eels started swimming in synchronous, moving in the same direction at the same time,
00:47
and even oscillating their bodies back and forth with the same rhythm.
00:51
Scientists don't know how or why vinegar eels swim this way, but they know they're a force to be reckoned with.
00:56
Once the nematodes started swimming in sync,
00:59
they exerted a force on the droplet that could move an object more than 100 times the weight of their bodies.
01:05
Now that is one funky flash mob.
01:09
This research was published January 10th in the journal Soft Matter.
01:13
The submission of construction
01:17
You told me that the
01:18
adoption formation
01:19
in devotion
01:20
at the sphere
01:24
The commencement century
01:26
The commencement ceremony
01:27
This days of a lost influence
01:28
The commencement ceremony
01:29
You have a brilliant
01:30
programs
01:36
The commencement ceremony
01:37
The commencement ceremony
01:39
Technical她
Be the first to comment
Add your comment
Recommended
3:46
|
Up next
Fly Over Mars' 'Noctis Labyrinthus' In This Visualization From Spacecraft Data
Space.com
3 hours ago
1:23
How Deep Did OSIRIS-REx Spacecraft's Arm 'Plunge' Into Asteroid Bennu?
Space.com
3 hours ago
1:45
NASA TESS All-Sky Mosaic And More Created With 5 Years Of Imagery
Space.com
3 hours ago
2:19
US Cities That Offer More Value For Retirees
Kiplinger
19 hours ago
2:37
Interesting Items You Can Buy At Dollar Stores
Kiplinger
20 hours ago
3:33
Should You Delay Your Social Security And Use Your 401K?
Kiplinger
22 hours ago
6:06
Alex Lifeson Epiphone Les Paul Standard Axcess Sound Demo | Music Radar
Music Radar
1 week ago
6:10
Cory Wong's Top Guitar Tips | Music Radar
Music Radar
1 week ago
6:53
Elektron Model - Samples Sound Demo | Music Radar
Music Radar
1 week ago
3:47
Will Brain Transplants Ever Be Possible?
Live Science
5 minutes ago
0:46
Super-Strong Magnet Literally Blew The Doors Off A Tokyo Laboratory
Live Science
5 minutes ago
1:52
Vikings May Not Have Been Who We Thought They Were: Tall, Blonde, Or Scandinavian
Live Science
5 minutes ago
0:44
Amazing Footage Shows Underwater Volcano In Japan Erupting
Live Science
5 minutes ago
3:07
Facts: Flu Shot And Side Effects
Live Science
1 hour ago
1:31
The Birth Of Dawn Storm Auroras On Jupiter
Live Science
1 hour ago
3:09
What Is Type 3 Diabetes?
Live Science
1 hour ago
1:27
Could Black Hole-Sized Magnetic Fields Be Created on Earth?
Live Science
1 hour ago
0:33
Video Captures Underwater Volcano Spewing Mud And Methane In The Barents Sea
Live Science
2 hours ago
2:25
What Was the Largest Empire In the World?
Live Science
2 hours ago
1:58
Ancient Mummy Coffins Discovered In Egypt’s Saqqara
Live Science
2 hours ago
3:01
Black Bears: The Most Common Bear in North America
Live Science
21 hours ago
1:39
Humongous Fossil Egg From Over 48 Million Years Ago In Antarctica
Live Science
21 hours ago
1:51
Whale With No Tail Swimming Off The Coast Of Washington State
Live Science
22 hours ago
1:49
Foreign Eggheads: Pointy-Skulled Women Were Immigrant Brides
Live Science
1 day ago
5:30
How Ice Needles Create Spontaneous Zen Gardens
Live Science
1 day ago
Be the first to comment