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فسيلة - transplant
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هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات
It is a digital library containing thousands of Arabic videos in all fields.
قوائم تشغيل فسيلة
https://www.dailymotion.com/fasela/playlists
Category
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LearningTranscript
00:06Hello
00:08Is this your first examination or a consultation?
00:11For consultation, we came to you here
00:13And when the power was charged
00:15Unfortunately, the energy ran out.
00:16Isn't it supposed to be that energy is indestructible?
00:19What is it? It's like you've transformed from one image to another.
00:22Your account is now a new thousand.
00:24Yes, but this is a consultation.
00:25Delete the first consultation?
00:26Have you consulted anyone before?
00:28No, not the first time
00:29Did you see? Everything?
00:31Does she need anything?
00:35Are they complete, by God, if I were to help them?
00:37When are we going to get into the doctor's office?
00:38Do you see all these people?
00:40Besides the person inside?
00:42You will enter after them.
00:43okay?
00:48God is great
00:50If we improve a lot
00:51Why is your father, your servant, so weak?
00:53Okay, let's get this straight, you're the first one we need to install.
00:56The touch was clear, there was a blessing in it.
00:58Your health is being examined by the doctor
00:59Because after he touched me, he fell to the ground
01:02It's clear that this was the last
01:03He pushed his energy
01:05Did he bring my land?
01:06Approximately
01:07Peace
01:12Unfortunately, everyone, the doctor's energy has run out.
01:14But the good news is that the rerun is still ongoing.
01:18The doctor hasn't lost his passion yet, folks.
01:21Please, sir, it's your turn.
01:22What passion is this?
01:23I am here because of energy; I need energy.
01:24What's wrong with you, teacher?
01:26You don't look like you're studying, by the way.
01:28You're saying the man's energy is depleted
01:29Energy is created from nothing.
01:32Passion
01:35Passion never ends
01:36No, by the way
01:37Many people lose their passion
01:39It's normal, I mean
01:40You won't find it
01:42Everything has its own purpose
02:11intense passion
02:12You won't find it
02:15The stupidity never ends
02:24Dear viewers, and the quality of the dialogues
02:26Welcome to a new episode of the Dabke program
02:28If God, my dear, were to be kind enough to let you visit London and take a short train ride to Norwich
02:32Its area will give you a great opportunity
02:34You are visiting one of the most beautiful national parks
02:37The Brutz D is one of the most famous National Parks in the world
02:41Britain's most famous nature reserve
02:43You'll find yourself among the millions of visitors who cherish it annually
02:45You'll explore wildlife amidst an amazing array of lakes and rivers
02:50My dear, the network can reach a length of two hundred kilometers.
02:53You can, my dear, you're not going to be able to move around in your boat and get on your vessel.
02:58Mohamed, don't take offense at my words, but I feel this isn't just a tourist program.
03:02You're trying to sell them to me? I'm going to London, not a nature reserve. I'm going to work. I'm going to get a Grester Linney.
03:08So, if you please, through this long introduction, what are you trying to say?
03:11The truth, my dear, is that just as Egypt lost the Nile, the English also celebrated it.
03:16They considered it one of their most important resources; in 1952, the British Geographical Society published a book called
03:23Origin of the Broad Lakes
03:25My dear friend, my book is about the beautiful collection of lakes and network of waterways.
03:31How long was it formed by natural conditions? Over millions of years.
03:35God bless you, Abu Ahmad
03:36And amidst, my dear, the joy of the English in the sense of the great natural resource and the sense of the quarter gift
03:41I'll bring you a plant named Joyce Lampard from the same lake country, Norwich.
03:44This scientist will tell them that it's impossible for this natural resource to be natural.
03:48What? Is this man-made? Are you sure, or is this just speculation?
03:52The English opposed it, and our ancestors cheered it on. Who made it? Didn't our ancestors have anything or anything?
03:57He'afor Lakes?
03:58Joyce, my dear, you'll come back and bring them the evidence.
04:01If you look, for example, at the edges of these lakes, you'll find they are almost vertical.
04:04The rain suddenly falls three meters down
04:07And my dear, it's not the natural way beaches are formed.
04:11When you look at natural lakes, you'll find that their sides are sloping, not vertical.
04:15The depth of natural lakes also varies.
04:18But Broads, its depth remained approximately three meters for about the entire year.
04:22Important, my dear, after years of research by Joyce and a dedicated team supported by Cambridge.
04:27The Royal Geographical Societies will publish their first new book eight years after their previous publication.
04:30Titled: The Making of Broad Lakes
04:33Making the Brods
04:34The first tree, my dear, was the origin of the broods.
04:37This title, my dear, tells you frankly that Joyce turned out to be a joke.
04:42These lakes are not natural, but artificial.
04:46We are talking about human-made buildings and their components.
04:49There is also archival evidence, such as the records of Norwich Cathedral.
04:53Which showed us that people were digging in these areas manually
04:56And this tradition continued for hundreds of years, from the twelfth century to the fourteenth century.
05:01Until the area was transformed into giant excavation sites
05:04And then came the floods in the fourteenth century.
05:06These pits sank and turned into the enchanting lakes we know today.
05:11Mohammed, that's something strange.
05:12Why the English in the twelfth, thirteenth, and fourteenth centuries
05:15They were digging aimlessly in the English soil.
05:17Did they anticipate the floods that would cause the lakes to overflow?
05:21They didn't play beach games like we did when we were little.
05:23According to Joyce's words, my dear
05:25These people were digging these pits to extract the leather
05:29Slippers? Slippers, my dear.
05:31The lightness, my dear, or this house, was a type of fuel in the preparation.
05:34People were digging to get them out
05:36And Abu Ahmad
05:37And what's with you, misleading content creator?
05:39We are in the thirteenth, thirteenth and fourteenth centuries
05:42Jib Sawat hadn't even woken up yet, and in history
05:45There were no factories
05:46There were no cars
05:48There was no embarrassing steam
05:51Let me explain, my dear
05:52No, Abu Ahmad, I don't talk to deceivers.
05:53Am I a fraud? Life, my dear, is about you and me.
05:56That's somewhat true.
05:57Why? Because we two don't agree on the meaning of fuel.
06:01Dear viewer, if you were to ask me
06:03Does fuel mean anything? My friend, I'll tell you.
06:04It is the need that started the whole fire
06:06To keep things interesting, let's imagine a primitive human who lived thousands of years ago.
06:10This human being, at a certain stage, understood the role of the sun.
06:12That yellow disc in the sky gives us light and momentum, and it works perfectly again.
06:17But as soon as the person who clicks on this disc disappears, it's like that.
06:20We no longer have light and we can't see anything.
06:22Any predator can easily prey on us.
06:24Secondly, we will pay even if we go to the cave to hide and prepare every year.
06:28We'll find my daughter's cold, sixty in the seventies.
06:30And at that point, our only hope was to wait until that disc came out again.
06:34So that the sky may light up and warm us
06:36And what I'll say, my dear, is that what happened was that there was one of the primitive tribes
06:40They were sitting with their hands on their cheeks at night, a little cold.
06:43They're waiting for them to call it the rooster's monfication.
06:45Cluck cluck cluck, the sun has risen
06:47From among them will emerge one clever person who will say to them, "Do you remember, people, the fire?"
06:50We humans have known about fire for over a million years.
06:53It's true that she was a source of knowledge in the middle of Haya, meaning
06:56And in somewhat strange circumstances, because lightning keeps falling and hitting the forests, the forests catch fire.
07:00Our friend, in order to alert him, will notice what, guys?
07:03This terrifying fire could become something like the sun in our nights if we could control it.
07:08Think about it
07:09The fire makes me feel like I have a special morning disc.
07:11It illuminates and warms, and does not burn the believers.
07:14The question here is, how can we control this fire?
07:16Honestly, Abu Hamad, I don't believe this talk.
07:17How could the idea of taming fire come to a primitive person?
07:20What's the problem, my dear? It's normal.
07:21Do you know what a primitive person is?
07:23Ah, Abu Hamad
07:23Every time I mention an idea, Abu says I already have a rudimentary one.
07:26So, he clarified that this is the type of ideas that come to me.
07:28And that's not a good thing
07:29Don't be alarmed, my friend, and let me tell you that it was indeed primitive peoples who thought about taming fire.
07:33This is according to the evidence that scientists have presented in a cave like Wonderwork Cave.
07:36And in Kuf Thania, in China and in Palestine
07:38They found burnt plant habitats and charred animal bones.
07:42This, my dear Hendel, is proof that early humans did indeed control fire.
07:46They used them for protection and warmth.
07:48Our friend Al-Badai is trying to control the fire.
07:50Note, my dear, that fire is our adornment.
07:52You need to keep eating regularly
07:54So that it stays on fire, my friend.
07:55When the match and the light are gone, it's over.
07:57Here our friend, the beginner, will try to eat fire and different things.
08:01What's up, fire? What's the difference between you and me?
08:03Zwick, what's so strange about that, my dear?
08:05The fire is beyond the reach of food.
08:07And she doesn't like to swallow water
08:08A woman drinks fire water and dies.
08:10Water is poison, fire
08:12Fire, for example, has no effect on the fresh leaves of trees that are covered in dust.
08:15Because it's full of water, it doesn't stir well.
08:17Humans think, "Why don't we try adding dirt and sand to the fire?"
08:20So, it's to her that the fire is extinguished, and the stones are the ones that heat up in the end.
08:23It doesn't burn
08:24It's all sauna and forget about it for an hour
08:25Then, my dear, a person begins to think
08:27God is the best, but perhaps the fire is like the one that animals ate.
08:30So, early humans discovered—I see it as—that fire is the most important thing.
08:33Barbecue Kebab Al-Jalil
08:36No, here the fire cooked the meat, it didn't burn it too much.
08:38Oh, my dear, you're eating fire and mud.
08:40It dried, and before it froze, he knew how to shape it.
08:43So, when man tries to eat fire, he discovers pottery.
08:46"Not like that, my dear," he said, placing his hand above it to deny it.
08:48No, these two... what is this? We can hold it and wrap it around ourselves. What is this?
08:52He said, "Uncle, he's ignorant, again, again, what's this?"
08:55This is a casserole dish, so why don't we put the meat that the fire cooked in it?
08:58Mohamed, this situation wasn't about fuel.
09:00We are with him and in front of his pilgrims
09:01They remain, my dear human being, a virtue that allows us to experiment and discover our needs.
09:04Until he learned what is known as fuel
09:07Fuel, my dear, as we said, is the need for fire; I need to take it.
09:11So that she herself remains on fire
09:13And through many experiences, man began to understand the taste of fire.
09:15Fire, for example, prefers dry things.
09:17Not as dry as stone or metal.
09:19It's not dry like wood, and the leaves are like trees.
09:21The fire gives a piece of wood to burn, and it continues to burn with us for a while.
09:24Humans, my dear, have managed to control fire and understand its nature.
09:27Approximately two hundred thousand years ago
09:29When you collect and store the fuel, you will be able to control the fire.
09:32If you controlled the fire, you could eat whenever you wanted.
09:34You can get warm whenever you like and go to sleep.
09:37Nobody has anything on you
09:38You live in a Smart Cafe
09:39Man was surprised that he had acquired the ability
09:42He eats, warms himself, and takes light whenever he wants.
09:45Hussein, the great power, my dear, has imprisoned man. He knows the two men.
09:49What is the ideal meal that fire loves?
09:51As we mentioned earlier, wood existed in prehistoric times, approximately 10,000 years ago.
09:55Humans knew dry wood as firewood and also knew animal dung, which is called "qars al-jala" in rural language.
10:01These, my dear, are small pieces of animal waste that are collected, dried, and used in the oven as fuel.
10:06My dear, the limit is 500 BC; ancient civilizations discovered something like charcoal, for example.
10:11This is much more durable than firewood because the wood is heated slowly until it dries out.
10:17And also vegetable oils like olive and sesame oil, which were used as lamp fuel by the Romans and Egyptian servants.
10:22And man also knew the house slipper
10:24So, my dear, that's what we talked about in the first episode.
10:26Decaying and numbered plants in the swamps
10:29We dig it up, bring it in, dry it, and then use it as fuel.
10:32The house, my dear, was located in areas with swamps.
10:35Scotland, Ireland, and some other European countries are experiencing this.
10:39And this is what the English were digging in Norwich.
10:41People thought that these natural lakes were natural
10:43Even though they were English, they were trying to dig to keep warm.
10:46Bord's Lakes is one of the most important natural wonders in England and possibly the world.
10:51That's how it was formed, my dear, they would take this leather and make cubes from it, dry it, and throw it at people as fuel.
10:56My dear, if you lived in Europe, the only solution would be to live in the winter.
10:59I'll tell you, my dear, that the industry is very, very large.
11:02The industry supplies everything with fuel, from the humblest huts to the most basic assets.
11:06At that time, the British were legally dividing excavation rights in each region.
11:09Because, my dear, the one whose land is so light is like the one whose land is full of short, ugly people.
11:13Its price reaches such and such a figure
11:14Also, my dear, there are different types of slippers; the further they are from the surface, the better their quality.
11:19The more heat it emitted
11:20So, my dear, it remains divided into types according to quality.
11:23There remained a special category of eighty, a special category of five, and a special category of five.
11:26That's why, my dear, the excavations in a place like Broads were gigantic.
11:29Because the lower people go, the better you'll find.
11:32The giant Brodz puzzles were a project to fill up
11:34And there's still plenty of good news, according to the Norwich College records.
11:37The reserve that exists beneath the surface of the area
11:39There were over nine hundred million cubic meters of Adam.
11:43It's not just Mardol who sets fire to it, he sets fire to the empire where the sun never sets.
11:47Countries, my dear, can not only provide fuel and energy and set Britain ablaze
11:51Countries that are on fire, including you
11:52Mohamed, don't take it personally, I feel these are old-fashioned solutions linked to the Middle Ages.
11:56Could you take us to the event for a bit?
11:57No, my dear, I wish
11:59But my friend, I tell you that the newer varieties haven't changed much.
12:01It is true that humanity has developed and developed mining tools along with it.
12:04So we were able to extract coal from underground.
12:07Because coal, as I told you, is the remains of decomposing plants.
12:09Like a slipper
12:10But in this case, it was subjected to millions of years of burial and compression underground.
12:15But in the end, the universe is one Saturday
12:16The same idea as the slipper
12:17And that, my dear, is exactly what a human being is capable of doing.
12:19It raises the free value of fuel
12:22We need to develop types that produce more heat than fire.
12:25But the idea is the same.
12:31The world's scales are all overturned
12:33The world map is changing
12:34Some countries rise and some countries fall
12:36But regarding the fuel issue, the scales are almost the same.
12:40The fire was in the food
12:41Pressed plants
12:42Okay, my daughter, a hall to be furnished
12:43Vibrate
12:44Vitamins
12:45I don't like rubber from the depths of the earth
12:47The beginning of man, as I told you, was when he burned wood to fill the cave.
12:50The factory burned coal to power the steam engines, thus keeping the factories running.
12:55The old-fashioned samsan used a samsan zizia
12:57The new device now lights up the device's light with the two bells.
13:00Mohammed, don't take me for granted
13:01Traveling at these prices causes dizziness and headaches, making us want to go back.
13:05Can we go back to the present?
13:06And when I issued the present statement, I was talking about gasoline.
13:09Where does the gasoline fit into your story?
13:10Where does gasoline fit into the history of humanity?
13:12Isn't this the fuel that the world is struggling to use?
13:15And at the same time, she's struggling to prevent him from using it?
13:17God bless you, my dear, you always ask me questions at the right time.
13:19By the way, this is the developer I was going to talk about.
13:21We are now, my dear, on the verge of encountering black gold.
13:24petroleum
13:25Petroleum, from which gasoline, diesel, and petrol are extracted
13:28This, my dear, is the main generator of electricity in the whole world.
13:31This is the biggest force controlling the means of discontent today.
13:33As we said, petroleum is fuel.
13:35Something that makes the fire lit
13:37His duty as a scientist working in the energy field is nothing more than that of a chef.
13:41What distinguishes petroleum is its combustion.
13:43Burning, my dear, is a three-shot series.
13:46They call it the Fire series
13:47To burn something you need three things
13:49First, oxygen
13:50And thank God, there is much of this in heaven.
13:52See the following section for coordination with its owners in the atmosphere.
13:54Next, heat need
13:55If there's no heat, there's no burning.
13:57And finally, my dear fuel
13:59Something is necessary, my dear.
14:00Fire with oxygen holds it
14:02Eat in it
14:02Without fuel, primitive man
14:04He will continue to have the right to quarantine until he dies.
14:06Because the spark doesn't stick to something and keep burning.
14:08This, my dear, happens when a substance shortens its chemical bonds.
14:11Thermal energy is released from this cracking process.
14:13With the reaction equation in front of you
14:14Fuel plus heat plus oxygen
14:16Your hands are hotter and smokeier
14:18And this smoke is good, where did you get it from, Hamad?
14:20The smoke is there, my dear.
14:21Because of the result of the combustion equation
14:23CO2 plus water vapor
14:24This appears in smoke images.
14:26This reaction, my dear, is called an exothermic reaction.
14:28Exotherm
14:29This is because of the amount of heat that came out on the other side of the equation.
14:32Greater than the amount of heat we needed to start the reaction
14:35And in order for this interaction to occur, my dear
14:36The reaction must always release more energy than it takes in.
14:39If combustion doesn't produce more heat
14:41What started will not last.
14:42Burning isn't just infinite energy, it's just a snapshot.
14:44From this, my dear, we conclude that fuel is not merely a material that fire consumes.
14:48Dhu Zad himself is turning into a source of fire
14:50As we said, my friend, not just any material is suitable for contracts.
14:53That's how wood works, okay?
14:54But if you keep heating copper until morning
14:56I swear I won't do anything to you
14:57He'll keep getting hot and say thank you, heat it up, give it to me
14:59Why does this happen?
15:00Because his chemical awe is different
15:02The bonds in wood are of the covalent type.
15:04Kovelan Bones
15:05My dear, links are easy to break
15:06And most importantly, when it breaks, it absorbs more heat.
15:09Here, the entire reaction is exothermic.
15:11But in metal bonds, for example copper
15:14The links are very strong
15:15Metal links, for example, Bones
15:17This cup of links requires a lot of energy.
15:18It also comes with a high temperature.
15:20And print something like copper for you, my dear
15:32Nuclear explosions in the Zarat operate using fusion.
15:35This is the brutal, violent way that Nahas is being tortured.
15:38If you come, my dear, a stall on wood
15:39You'll find a much simpler story than that.
15:40It doesn't happen in stars or nuclear explosions.
15:42These are your tears, they happen inside a plant
15:44The story of wood begins with the process of photosynthesis.
15:47What happens in green paper
15:48Before even the trunks and branches
15:50And all this wood doesn't show
15:51This process is carried out by chloroplasts.
15:53Which remains present in plant cells
15:54It does this using chlorophyll.
15:56Do you remember what you studied?
15:57Do you remember what this material does?
15:58It absorbs water
15:59And it takes the sun's rays
16:00carbon dioxide
16:01And the world is like that, canned
16:03And they return glucose and oxygen to you
16:06It is due to the atmosphere
16:07ingenious chemical reaction
16:09Second hundred
16:10carbon dioxide
16:11Sun pressure
16:12Your hands are glucose and oxygen
16:14Take this, you animal!
16:15Take this, human
16:16Go ahead and do your thing.
16:17flourish
16:17Create
16:18Let me remind you of something, my dear
16:19Oxygen is not the target of the reaction.
16:21This is just
16:21A wind is emitted from the plant near the reaction.
16:23My dear vegetarian exports
16:24We, as animals and as humans
16:26We lived off it then
16:27We said, "I find God."
16:29Living
16:30Finish it, Labat
16:30Come on, my dear, regarding the plant
16:32The goal of the interaction
16:32It is glucose
16:33Part of the glucose is converted
16:35For energy
16:35The plants need it
16:36Another part turns into wood that builds and grows the plant.
16:39Wood comes from glucose sugar.
16:41Now, my dear, compare this story of the cute wooden thing he made from sugar.
16:45The story of the copper that was tarnished in the prime of the dying star
16:49So it makes sense that we understand
16:51In the ecstasies of small heat, they loosen the bonds of wood.
16:53They don't loosen the copper ties
16:55or minerals
16:56Come on, my dear, I'll stop you here and ask you a surprise question.
16:58I don't notice anything in the equation for photosynthesis.
17:02That's the opposite, my friend. Think of it as glucose as fuel with oxygen.
17:07If it was exposed to heat, a burning process occurred.
17:11It will come out like any burning process
17:13Heat, CO2, and steam
17:15Do you know why this happened?
17:16Because glucose is essentially formed by combining CO2 with water
17:22Which is the process that occurs in photosynthesis
17:25What does the plant do?
17:26It takes in two carbon dioxides
17:27It takes water from its roots
17:29With the sun's rays that give heat, energy, light, thank you
17:32You still have oxygen and glucose.
17:34What is this? What is this? What is this?
17:35The dragon is two processes, I say, some are reversed
17:37Interact, my dear, going back and forth
17:38Look here, my dear, in front of you
17:39If you walk from right to left, the sons of Dawi will remain.
17:41And the sun's rays are being halved and the water
17:43Carbon dioxide and other oxygen molecules produce glucose.
17:45If you walk from left to right, it's a burn.
17:47And then glucose, which in this case is the fuel
17:50Befitkt Lamia and Sani Oxidi Carbon
17:52And the heat rises
17:53Take another look, my dear, and focus on it.
17:55If the two equations were returned, some cuts
17:57The smelly reaction I told you about
17:58You will discover that the heat released from glucose in the combustion process
18:01It was the sun's rays that formed it in the process of photosynthesis.
18:05That's exactly it, Muhammad. Nothing is missing, nothing is lacking.
18:07Remember, my dear
18:08Energy is neither satisfied nor diminished by nothingness.
18:10Sovar means
18:11So, my dear, we now have a device that can store the sun's energy in bonds.
18:16This is stored as fuel or muzzle
18:19He's using it as an energy booster.
18:20After that, a person who hasn't discovered it can still use it at any time.
18:23This, my dear, is the answer to the question that primitive man never asked.
18:26Where did this energy come from?
18:27Why?
18:27The fuel reached a high temperature.
18:28The energy came from the sun itself.
18:30But the sun is ancient; its energy was stored through photosynthesis in the nose.
18:34And then it was just you and me.
18:35Thousands of years after this nose was formed
18:37Go burn it so I can benefit from the sun's heat that created it.
18:41Imagine, my dear, you went to the primitive human.
18:43And let's not forget that, O human, O beginning
18:44Remember the disc that was so bright?
18:46It disappears almost every day for half the day
18:49The world is getting dark and cold
18:50The sun
18:51The truth is, the nose you're using is the sun.
19:01The plant, my dear, has simply reproduced the past.
19:04Reproduced this bright, warm sun
19:08Of course, my dear, if you said this to anyone, I'd hit you with the bone in my hand.
19:11He will tell you, "Come, let's put you away from the fire."
19:12It works for you, you old man
19:13If you, my dear, reflect on this statement, you will find that all types of fuel
19:16Solar energy storage facilities
19:19Petroleum and natural gas originated from microscopic marine organisms.
19:22The algae and flankton that have lived for millions and millions of years
19:25These beings, my dear, were simply light in the process of millions of light-years.
19:27To convert carbon dioxide and water into organic compounds
19:30So, my dear, it was storing the sun's energy in its waves.
19:33When these creatures died, they fell to the bottom of the sea.
19:34But then the place was, so it was said, with oxygen
19:37These organisms have not completely decomposed.
19:39Be careful, my dear, if you analyze the whole thing, the energy will be resting.
19:42The decomposition of organisms addresses the poverty of sustainability.
19:43What happened was that these creatures were buried on top of each other.
19:45They are buried on top of each other, and they are buried on top of each other.
19:47Millions of years passed over it until the sedimentary layers began to put pressure on it.
19:51This is surrounded by a waxy substance called kerogen.
19:54With increased temperature and pressure, kerogen begins to transform.
19:57If the average temperature is between fifty and one hundred and fifty degrees Celsius
20:00We will have petroleum
20:01If the temperature remains above 150 degrees Celsius
20:03This petroleum will be broken down and converted into natural gas.
20:06After they form, my dear, they begin to move upwards.
20:08They start, my dear, by digging into the rocks that have pores.
20:10It has things like bubbles that pop up, pop up, pop up, pop up
20:13Until they become trapped under layers of impermeable rock
20:16No distances, no ruins
20:17This, my dear, is what made the tanks from which we extract today's fuel.
20:20In short, my dear, the oil and natural gas I'm using from today
20:24They are solar energy stored in a reservoir for millions of years.
20:28Thank you, my dear
20:30When you pick up a heater and light the stove to make a cup of tea
20:33So you are actually recovering solar energy
20:35Energy that has existed for millions of years
20:37You are using it now
20:38Of course, Abu Ahmed, if I make tea with a kettle
20:39Does this mean that an independent person doesn't need the sun's rays?
20:42This electricity, my dear, means you'll earn it in the Ramadan cannon.
20:44Who will answer it again in the sun?
20:45As we said
20:46Even materials that are unsuitable as fuel, like copper
20:48Humans are not ahead of their time.
20:49Use it to transfer energy
20:51You hear about copper electrical cables
20:52So, my dear, that's the reason we explained when we told his story.
20:55This is why copper is capable of providing us with energy.
20:58We need strong metal
20:59A man like that can stand with us
21:00Where are the enormous quantities of energy?
21:02Without shaking it, the bond will not be broken.
21:04And I do not stay up all night because of a whine
21:05From here, my dear, man developed a kind of energy deficiency.
21:07What material, what element will he find on this planet?
21:10Either energy will come out of it
21:12If it doesn't work, it will be fuel.
21:13Energy is emitted from it
21:14It is busy and a connector is transporting it.
21:15Stop in the kitchen
21:16He works in delivery.
21:17Or to put it another way, my dear, ever since man discovered fire
21:20He's always wondering what to feed her.
21:22What's for dinner today?
21:24Before the discovery of fuel
21:25The relationship between man and energy
21:27It is through eating
21:28Two hours for each potato
21:29There are still two hours left.
21:30I'm adding potatoes
21:31It also runs from the lion and needs its respectable sprint
21:33Addition works on the addition
21:34potatoes
21:34Before the fire hit, the energy came from the food.
21:37Human physical and mental effort
21:38It was translated into thermal images.
21:41He can take it from the food
21:42But after discovering fire, he began to harness the sun's energy for his own benefit.
21:46So that he can get extra thermal privileges.
21:49Instead of telling you to eat potatoes whenever you get cold
21:51I'll tell you to light a fire so we can flow
21:52Okay, there's still an hour left, increase the fuel and let the engine run even faster.
21:56And stays longer
21:57The lion is chasing you and you want to run about 10 or 12 kilometers from it.
22:00Borrow from old solar energy
22:01Ride a bicycle, ride a car
22:03You don't have to be a carbologist to be able to outrun the lion.
22:05This is what made man, from the moment he learned to exploit fire
22:08We, my dear, are the only beings on the planet
22:10Those who were able to open the solar energy storage facilities
22:13I've never thought of an animal that would burn a fire and be pushed
22:15Animals in the cold will eventually hibernate, like lions.
22:17Or it includes some battery-like components
22:19You might think that before using fire
22:20He owed the sun nothing
22:22All the energy came from food, just like the animals.
22:24And so, he should be protected from the sun.
22:26But where can you go, Shams, from human relationships?
22:28The mere fact that you are moving means that you are consuming solar energy.
22:31Old solar energy is also stored as fuel.
22:34God, how come I'm not storing fuel inside it?
22:36And I'm driving on gasoline
22:37You are burning fuel that is inside you
22:39Buhamad allowed you to gossip
22:40I'm going to put the gasoline in
22:40And Omar, no one will touch your gun.
22:42And put the gasoline in my tank
22:43My dear, I didn't mean any of that.
22:44You, my dear, are fuel and combustion within you
22:46Everything that happens inside you is perfectly normal.
22:48But your combustion is what your cell does
22:51What's happening to you, my dear, is biological combustion.
22:53Cell respiration
22:55The secret of respiration
22:56And this, my dear, is a simple equation.
22:57Glucose and oxygen are ours.
22:59Carbon dioxide, water vapor, and energy
23:01Oh Abu Ahmed, this is similar to the combustion equation that happens outside.
23:04It's not like her, my dear, it's exactly the same.
23:05Glucose comes from food and oxygen comes from the lungs.
23:08The other side of the equation
23:09It contains the energy you burned.
23:10Which you will hopefully use
23:11So that you can do your activities
23:13And your Asanis work
23:14And besides all this, he goes out
23:15Water vapor and carbon dioxide in the form of exhalation
23:17Of course, we all know that it doesn't just come out as exhalation.
23:20But God willing, his luck will remain good and he'll leave in the form of a breath of fresh air.
23:23Also, my dear, just like what happens when you burn something and smoke comes out
23:26You're also blowing smoke
23:27When you burn glucose, the glucose in your blood becomes a source of energy.
23:31Just like the nose smokes when you burn
23:33You also emit smoke when you burn glucose.
23:35The glucose in your blood is a constant source of energy.
23:37That's why your blood sugar drops when you're hungry.
23:39You, my dear, burn glucose just like a car burns gasoline.
23:42Whether it's gasoline or food, the dragon's energy comes from the sun.
23:45So you and the car are running on solar power?
23:47The difference between you, my dear, is that you consume fresh solar energy.
23:51The potatoes you've been eating for a few months
23:53It's been frozen for a year, sir.
23:54But the car's solar power
23:57It's been millions of years
23:59Bet or Expired, but it's running on a planet.
24:01Okay, my dear, we say that the sun is our favorite star.
24:03We're not flattering the sun, nor are we attacking the chain, Elham Hanagag.
24:05The sun is the source of energy on this planet.
24:08Any energy sourced from a fossil fuel or shaft
24:09It was made by the sun, which has existed for millions of years.
24:12Before daylight, my dear, humans benefit most from the sun's energy.
24:15He was finishing his food
24:17It is man's fate, my dear, to borrow that ancient sun-duke
24:20So that he can exploit it
24:21It was only when he ate food that had this energy.
24:24Greater than this energy
24:26This is the same as the animal's energy capacity.
24:27Energy in relation to food
24:28But what distinguished man was from the moment he discovered fire and fuel.
24:32An endless door opened for him
24:33So that he can utilize every atom of sunlight
24:36Even if this beam has existed for millions of years
24:38And he disappeared
24:38But what distinguished man was the moment he discovered fire and fuel.
24:42From that moment, my dear, an endless door opened for him.
24:45To take advantage of every sunshine
24:46Even if it had existed for millions of years
24:48To bring the sun's timeless energy under his control
24:52In the past, solar energy was used more efficiently.
24:55If the plant is a little bit of potato, we'll run 10 kilos
24:58Now I can fly 10,000 kilos
25:00The light source is originally concentrated sunlight, distilled over millions of years.
25:05Despite the continuous exploitation of solar energy
25:07However, we have not yet reached the point of fully exploiting it.
25:09Let me tell you the truth, we haven't yet reached the full potential of the energy resources available on planet Earth.
25:14Even the portion of solar energy that reaches Earth, we haven't fully utilized.
25:18We, my dear, and the Russian physicist Nikolai Kartchev
25:21We are still trying to become a planetary civilization
25:24It means a civilization that tries to exploit all the energy available on its planet.
25:28Look around you, you'll find solar energy, wind energy, volcanic energy, even the Madhu Island.
25:32We as humans haven't reached that level yet.
25:34We're around 0.73 on the Kartschaff scale, my friend.
25:37We still have a good way to go before we can control the Earth's energy.
25:40Kartchafi, my dear, is completing his work, but only in his imagination.
25:42He says that the next stage is the stage of star civilization.
25:45We might reach this star civilization in the future.
25:48My monkey might exist somewhere in the universe
25:51This civilization, my dear, could potentially control the energy of an entire star.
25:54It means they could build something like the Dyson Ambassador Kurt Dyson
25:56This is a giant structure that surrounds the star and gathers all its energy.
26:00Kartashaf doesn't know here
26:01He claims that it's possible that after this, a Hungarian civilization might also come.
26:05This is my dear Label, the corn monster.
26:06The civilization here can harness the energy of an entire galaxy.
26:09She controls millions of stars and uses them as she pleases.
26:12This is similar to what we see in science fiction movies.
26:14The Imfire from Star Wars or the Alborg from Star Trek
26:16Of course, my dear, it's something beyond our current imagination.
26:18We are still in the early stages and struggling in the field of energy.
26:20But these are, by the way, levels we are expected to reach.
26:23After that, some people complicated the classification and added fourth and fifth levels.
26:26What might happen if we discovered that there are multiple universes?
26:29And there remains a civilization capable of controlling the universes or the laws of physics themselves.
26:33Beware of what I have conquered, which cannot be created from nothing.
26:36Are you planning to create something out of nothing, or what?
26:37Now we need to start thinking about these laws.
26:39Let's start by exploring ways to change these laws.
26:41And that's it, the GTA code
26:43That's right, my friend, all of this is still within the realm of hypotheses and science fiction.
26:47But why not, my dear? Let's imagine and dream.
26:49But let's not forget that what opened the door to this imagination for us was fuel.
26:52The fuel that altered its capabilities and amplified its power struck it into infinite mass.
26:55Let's dream that we control the universe with all its stars.
26:58And yet, my dear, we're still saying "my life" with the energy of just one star.
27:01However, it is the source of all the energies we have known so far.
27:05The one who illuminated this room and the one who charged the device we're watching it on
27:08All of this, my dear, is from the sun.
27:09The truth, my dear, is that there are very few energy sources available on Earth right now.
27:14But its origin doesn't return to the sun.
27:16But that's another story.
27:18That's it, my dear. Finally, people have forgotten. Let's look at the previous case.
27:20See the next case, which is attributed to the sources.
27:21If we're on YouTube, we should subscribe to the channel.
27:23He tells you, my dear, that once the police raided the house
27:25Oh God, protect us!
27:25Hey Abu Hamid, you're building a light, sir, without a permit.
27:28God, Abu Hamid, give him a strong push.
27:29That's why, my dear, they said to remove it.