Monster Volcano Eruptions Caught On Camera (Reaction)

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43 Comments

  1. I would recommend either Tambora, Krakatoa, or Mt. St. Helens. You can find videos on those three eruptions on a channel called Geographics. My personal favorite one is about Tambora and The Year Without Summer.

  2. I was there with my family whenever Taal erupted. It was so chaotic and there was wet ash mud everywhere, out uber had to pour warer on the windshield to even see. It was already hard enough to get out of the driveway because of how slick the mud was. Thankfully we got out of there before the major shutdowns started. It was dark muddy and sirens were going off everywhere. It felt like a movie. You can see my family's interview on News Channel 3 the Palm Springs Family one.

  3. The delay is the speed of light vs the speed of sound. You see a distant explosion like that well before you hear it. When you hear a blast, it has usually happened between 10 seconds to minutes ago depending on just how far you are away from the source of the sound. Sound moves at about 761 miles per hour, and the Tonga eruption was heard as far as 6000 miles away…so they heard the eruption with a delay of approximately 7 hours and 50 minutes.

  4. Your eyes see images that come to you at light speed (670,616,629 mph) sound only moves to you at 767 mph (on average). You don't notice the difference when most things are in close proximity to you, they seem simultaneous to your brain. But at long distances you will notice the delay, as when you see lightning and you hear the crack of thunder (they happen at exactly the same time) but the sound takes longer to reach you than the visual of the lightning.

  5. Light travels so much faster than sound that you get quite a delay if you're more than a few miles away. Same as thunder coming way after the lightning.

  6. They are maybe 10-15 miles away, so there will be a noticeable delay between seeing and hearing. Good basic example of how much faster light travels than sound👍

    Oh, and they do produce mushroom clouds, as does any large explosion. They have nothing to do with nuclear explosions or detonations. That's just the result of the massive heat rising, sucking in air from the ground, and dispersing as it rises in altitude and cools.

  7. The reason why the shockwave is so "delayed" is because light travels far faster than sound. Relative speeds in our atmosphere: light=299,000,000 m/s, sound 331.5 meters/sec. The explosive shockwave is technically a sound wave, but a compressive one, which propagates at a rate of 1/50 to 1/15th the speed of sound. Thus this wave travelled at about 60 m/s ~134 mph, 216 kmh) taking 14.6 seconds to reach them at roughly a kilometer away.

  8. 3:31 I counted the time it took for the sound to reach the camera and it was around 12 seconds. The speed of sound in air is 1125 ft/s and that means they're around 13,500ft (2.55mi, 4km) from the volcano.

    I don't think i would've been as calm about being that close to an exploding mountain as these lunatics were.

  9. The delay in the sound is because, Sound travels at 1100 feet per second. If you count the seconds between the Volcanic Eruption and when You here the sound. 10 seconds is 11000 feet away.

  10. I’ve climbed to the summits of 2 different volcanoes.. Mt St Helens in Washington state, and Acatenango in Guatemala. I actually discovered your channel when your reaction video to the Mt St Helens eruption showed up as a suggestion to me after I had been checking out videos in preparation of climbing it in October 2020!

  11. Why you see it before you hear it? Simple the speed of light is faster than the speed of sound. Thus the light reflects off of the cloud of smoke and makes it to your eyes before sound of the explosion makes it to you.

  12. I am from Guatemala which is located in central America. Guatemala has 33 volcanos of which 6 are active so we are familiar with volcanic activity 🌋. You can actually hick a dormant volcano called Acatenango which is across an active volcano called Fuego.
    P. S. I commented before the end 😁

  13. There are volcanoes in California, the hasn't erupted in 200 years or more. just Google, how many volcanoes that's California have in the would shocked.

  14. React to Death Valley National Park Road Trip – How You DON'T Want It To End by Road Trip Randy and Retracing the Final Steps of the Death Valley Germans by Wonderhussy Adventures.

  15. good ole pacific rim. AKA "ring of fire". Asia's pacific coasts, both of the american continents pacific coats, and all the islands in between are included

  16. in 2005, I hiked to the top of Mt Fuji—I looked down into the caldera. There's an inn, a bar, a souvenir shop, and a seismic station on the far side of the caldera at the top. There were five of us and it took 7 hours. I thought it was extinct but apparently, I was wrong….gives me chills to know I was on that mountain, two miles into the sky…

  17. In the first one the pressure wave wasn't pushing the clouds; the sudden changes in pressure actually makes the moisture in the air condense and be visible for a moment. The same effect can be seen when jet aircraft go supersonic. And it took so long to hear it because the speed of sound is slower than light, about 5 sec/mile; so the people filming were about 1.5 miles away.

  18. The speed of sound is only about 767 mph at sea level, so it will take a little bit to cover the distance from the eruption to their boat. Thinking maybe 2.5 miles away or so if my mental math is close.

  19. I lived at the time 60 miles north of Mt.St.Helen and watched her blow from a tavern. By the time I left my Red Camaro was a Grey color from the ash , lucky I had the convertible top up. I know live 25 miles from Mt Rainier an active volcano.

  20. Even though the volcanoes shown were explosive in nature, not all volcanoes erupt explosively, such as for example the 2018 eruption of Kilauea in Hawaii that erupted in the middle of the Leilani Estates residential neighborhood with around 25 fissures, or cracks in the Earth, opening up, spewing lava and the 2021 eruption of Fagradalsfjall in Iceland that was viewed the world over thanks to many live streams that were placed there as it was an effusive type of eruption.

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