- published: 10 Jul 2009
- views: 2023091
3:34

Hand vs. Liquid Nitrogen and the Leidenfrost Effect
I stick my hand (momentarily) directly into liquid nitrogen but don't suffer any injuries ...
published: 10 Jul 2009
Hand vs. Liquid Nitrogen and the Leidenfrost Effect
I stick my hand (momentarily) directly into liquid nitrogen but don't suffer any injuries due to the Leidenfrost effect.
The Leidenfrost effect is the formation of a gas barrier between a hot surface and a boiling liquid if the temperature difference is great enough. This gas barrier greatly slows the heat transfer between the two and allows the liquid to last longer and consequently the hot surface to remain hot longer. This effect can be seen in a frying pan as it's being heated. At first the water quickly boils as it's dropped in but at a hot enough temperature the Leidenfrost effect takes over and makes the water skate around the surface lasting a very long time.
Liquid nitrogen vs. a room temperature object will also exhibit the effect preventing it from instantly freezing the object... such as my hand.
- published: 10 Jul 2009
- views: 2023091
3:11

Liquid Nitrogen Explosion - Cool Science Experiment
Check out this and other cool science experiments at http://www.stevespanglerscience.com/e...
published: 18 Nov 2008
Liquid Nitrogen Explosion - Cool Science Experiment
Check out this and other cool science experiments at http://www.stevespanglerscience.com/experiments/ Steve Spangler surprised meteorologist Becky Ditchfield with an in-studio demonstration of his liquid nitrogen explosion. The reaction on her face is priceless.
About Steve Spangler Science...
Steve Spangler is a celebrity teacher, science toy designer, speaker, author and an Emmy award-winning television personality. Spangler is probably best known for his Mentos and Diet Coke geyser experiment that went viral in 2005 and prompted more than 1,000 related YouTube videos. Spangler is the founder of www.SteveSpanglerScience.com, a Denver-based company specializing in the creation of science toys, classroom science demonstrations, teacher resources and home for Spangler's popular science experiment archive and video collection. Spangler is a frequent guest on the Ellen DeGeneres Show where he takes classroom science experiments to the extreme. Check out his pool filled with 2,500 boxes of cornstarch!
Cool Science Toys - http://www.SteveSpanglerScience.com
Sign up for the Experiment of the Week - http://www.stevespanglerscience.com/experiment-of-the-week
Watch Spangler's Science Videos - http://www.stevespanglerscience.com/video/
Attend a Spangler Hands-on Science Workshop for Teachers - http://www.stevespanglerscience.com/teacher_training/
Visit Spangler's YouTube Channel - http://www.youtube.com/stevespanglerscience
Join the conversation on Steve Spangler's blog - http://www.SteveSpangler.com
Additional Information:
On the education side, Spangler started his career as a science teacher in the Cherry Creek School district for 12 years. Today, Steve travels extensively training teachers in ways to make learning more engaging and fun. His hands-on science boot camps and summer institutes for teachers inspire and teach teachers how to prepare a new generation for an ever-changing work force. Over the last 15 years, he has also made more than 500 television appearances as an authority on hands-on science and inquiry-based learning.
On the business side, Spangler is the founder and CEO of Steve Spangler Science, a Denver-based company specializing in the creation of educational toys and kits and hands-on science training services for teachers. The companys unique business strategies and viral creations have been featured in the Wall Street Journal, Inc. Magazine, Wired and TIME Magazine where online readers voted Steve Spangler #18 in the Top 100 Most Influential People of the Year for 2006 (what were they thinking?). You'll find more than 140 Spangler created products available online at SteveSpanglerScience.com and distributed to toy stores and mass-market retailers worldwide.
Spangler joined NBC affiliate 9News in 2001 as the science education specialist. His weekly experiments and science segments are designed to teach viewers creative ways to make learning fun. His now famous Mentos Geyser experiment, turning 2-liter bottles of soda into erupting fountains, became an Internet sensation in September 2005 when thousands of people started posting their own Mentos explosions on YouTube.com.
As founder of SteveSpanglerScience.com, Spangler and his design team have developed more than 140 educational toys and science-related products featured by mass-market retailers like Target, Wal-Mart, Toys R' Us, Discovery Channel Stores and over 1,400 independent specialty toy stores. His educational science catalog and on-line business offers more than a thousand science toys and unique learning resources. Recently, Spangler has been featured in the Wall Street Journal, Inc. Magazine, WIRED, the History Channel, Food Network and TIME Magazine where on-line readers voted Steve Spangler #18 in the Top 100 Most Influential People of the Year for 2006.
His recent appearances on the Ellen DeGeneres Show have taught viewers how to blow up their food, shock their friends, create mountains of foam, play on a bed of nails, vanish in a cloud of smoke and how to turn 2,500 boxes of cornstarch and a garden hose into a swimming pool of fun.
- published: 18 Nov 2008
- views: 573214
5:11

Poor man's "Liquid Nitrogen"
UNSAFE, NOT FOR KIDS! Main article: http://bit.ly/TNXQ7
http://amasci.com/amateur/liqui...
published: 04 Aug 2008
Poor man's "Liquid Nitrogen"
UNSAFE, NOT FOR KIDS! Main article: http://bit.ly/TNXQ7
http://amasci.com/amateur/liquid_n2.html
Can't get liquid nitrogen? Then make your own -80C/110F fake version by using Dry Ice. Note that this science demonstration involves several major safety hazards, and should only be performed by skilled educators. If used for science fair projects, close parent/teacher supervision is required.
But also go see http://bit.ly/EKqgi SFGATE: "The War On Curiosity" (stamping out hobbyist science in order to keep kids safe.)
For lots of suggested low-temp physics demonstrations click on the above liquid_N2 link. Or, search www for: liquid nitrogen demonstrations.
Note that dry ice comes from companies listed in your local yellow pages. Some welder-supply stores carry it. In Seattle, you can find it in the seafood section of QFC neighborhood grocery, and at some Fred Meyer stores. Ask for dry ice pellets rather than slabs if they have them, so you won't have to chop it up yourself.
And if you're going to use it in drinks or punchbowls, make certain you have FOOD GRADE DRY ICE, since the other stuff is full of grease from petroleum distillation.
.
Lots more stuff at SCIENCE HOBBYIST http://amasci.com/unew.html
.
Note: trolls/spammers blocked immediately, zero tolerance
- published: 04 Aug 2008
- views: 1563034
3:25

Fun With Liquid Nitrogen - Cool Science Experiment
Check out this and other cool science experiments at http://www.stevespanglerscience.com/e...
published: 24 Sep 2008
Fun With Liquid Nitrogen - Cool Science Experiment
Check out this and other cool science experiments at http://www.stevespanglerscience.com/experiments/ Steve demonstrates the effects Liquid Nitrogen has on different objects.
About Steve Spangler Science...
Steve Spangler is a celebrity teacher, science toy designer, speaker, author and an Emmy award-winning television personality. Spangler is probably best known for his Mentos and Diet Coke geyser experiment that went viral in 2005 and prompted more than 1,000 related YouTube videos. Spangler is the founder of www.SteveSpanglerScience.com, a Denver-based company specializing in the creation of science toys, classroom science demonstrations, teacher resources and home for Spangler's popular science experiment archive and video collection. Spangler is a frequent guest on the Ellen DeGeneres Show where he takes classroom science experiments to the extreme. Check out his pool filled with 2,500 boxes of cornstarch!
Cool Science Toys - http://www.SteveSpanglerScience.com
Sign up for the Experiment of the Week - http://www.stevespanglerscience.com/experiment-of-the-week
Watch Spangler's Science Videos - http://www.stevespanglerscience.com/video/
Attend a Spangler Hands-on Science Workshop for Teachers - http://www.stevespanglerscience.com/teacher_training/
Visit Spangler's YouTube Channel - http://www.youtube.com/stevespanglerscience
Join the conversation on Steve Spangler's blog - http://www.SteveSpangler.com
Additional Information:
On the education side, Spangler started his career as a science teacher in the Cherry Creek School district for 12 years. Today, Steve travels extensively training teachers in ways to make learning more engaging and fun. His hands-on science boot camps and summer institutes for teachers inspire and teach teachers how to prepare a new generation for an ever-changing work force. Over the last 15 years, he has also made more than 500 television appearances as an authority on hands-on science and inquiry-based learning.
On the business side, Spangler is the founder and CEO of Steve Spangler Science, a Denver-based company specializing in the creation of educational toys and kits and hands-on science training services for teachers. The companys unique business strategies and viral creations have been featured in the Wall Street Journal, Inc. Magazine, Wired and TIME Magazine where online readers voted Steve Spangler #18 in the Top 100 Most Influential People of the Year for 2006 (what were they thinking?). You'll find more than 140 Spangler created products available online at SteveSpanglerScience.com and distributed to toy stores and mass-market retailers worldwide.
Spangler joined NBC affiliate 9News in 2001 as the science education specialist. His weekly experiments and science segments are designed to teach viewers creative ways to make learning fun. His now famous Mentos Geyser experiment, turning 2-liter bottles of soda into erupting fountains, became an Internet sensation in September 2005 when thousands of people started posting their own Mentos explosions on YouTube.com.
As founder of SteveSpanglerScience.com, Spangler and his design team have developed more than 140 educational toys and science-related products featured by mass-market retailers like Target, Wal-Mart, Toys R' Us, Discovery Channel Stores and over 1,400 independent specialty toy stores. His educational science catalog and on-line business offers more than a thousand science toys and unique learning resources. Recently, Spangler has been featured in the Wall Street Journal, Inc. Magazine, WIRED, the History Channel, Food Network and TIME Magazine where on-line readers voted Steve Spangler #18 in the Top 100 Most Influential People of the Year for 2006.
His recent appearances on the Ellen DeGeneres Show have taught viewers how to blow up their food, shock their friends, create mountains of foam, play on a bed of nails, vanish in a cloud of smoke and how to turn 2,500 boxes of cornstarch and a garden hose into a swimming pool of fun.
- published: 24 Sep 2008
- views: 508147
1:32

Liquid Nitrogen Into A Swimming Pool
At Penguicon 4 in 2006, Nifty Guest Howard Tayler of www.SchlockMercenary.com took this vi...
published: 04 May 2006
Liquid Nitrogen Into A Swimming Pool
At Penguicon 4 in 2006, Nifty Guest Howard Tayler of www.SchlockMercenary.com took this video of Penguicon co-founder Rob Landley throwing a bowl of liquid nitrogen in the swimming pool, and the resulting billow of fog.
- published: 04 May 2006
- views: 9535172
6:47

Liquid Nitrogen Demonstration
Aaron Keller, Chemistry teacher, demonstrates the amazing properties of liquid nitrogen. H...
published: 03 Aug 2008
Liquid Nitrogen Demonstration
Aaron Keller, Chemistry teacher, demonstrates the amazing properties of liquid nitrogen. He explains each demonstration in an understandable way. The temperature of liquid nitrogen is -196C (-321F). He explains how a dewar flask works. He pulls balloons out of a cooler, showing the expansion of a gas as it warms. He demonstrates the explosive power of the expansion of liquid nitrogen in an enclosed container. Liquid nitrogen is so cold that the floor is like a hot griddle. Liquid nitrogen has a very low viscosity. He demonstrates how brittle a flower becomes when frozen in a liquid nitrogen bath. Finally, he shows how to shatter a racquetball. As a bonus he shows how nitrogen gas can be used to put out a candle flame.
- published: 03 Aug 2008
- views: 468731
4:03

Nitrogen - Periodic Table of Videos
Number 7 on the periodic table, Nitrogen is the most abundant element in Earth's atmospher...
published: 05 Jul 2008
Nitrogen - Periodic Table of Videos
Number 7 on the periodic table, Nitrogen is the most abundant element in Earth's atmosphere. More elements at http://www.periodicvideos.com/
- published: 05 Jul 2008
- views: 144590
2:27

Let's Pour Liquid Nitrogen on the Floor!
Liquid nitrogen?! On the floor?! Who's going to clean that mess up?!
See what really happ...
published: 13 Jul 2012
Let's Pour Liquid Nitrogen on the Floor!
Liquid nitrogen?! On the floor?! Who's going to clean that mess up?!
See what really happens when one of the world's most beloved cryogenic liquids comes into contact with a room temperature floor.
- published: 13 Jul 2012
- views: 77605
2:39

The Nitrogen Cycle - It's Easy!
When first learning about the nitrogen cycle it can be pretty confusing! Hopefully, this m...
published: 26 Mar 2011
The Nitrogen Cycle - It's Easy!
When first learning about the nitrogen cycle it can be pretty confusing! Hopefully, this movie is easy to understand and can make fish keeping for beginners easier!
Once you know this cycle, it's pretty easy to cycle it. Just introduce a form of ammonia (fish food, a frozen shrimp overnight, a few hardy fish, or PURE ammonia for example) and the rest is testing for ammonia, nitrite and nitrate levels. Once most chemicals are cleared you can (slowly) add your fish to the aquarium!!
If you have any questions, comment below of send a message!
Music: Blue Eyes by Mika
- published: 26 Mar 2011
- views: 69597
12:07

CSB Safety Video: Hazards of Nitrogen Asphyxiation
Fatal Accident at Valero Refinery
Delaware City, DE, November 5, 2005
Two contract emp...
published: 27 Aug 2008
CSB Safety Video: Hazards of Nitrogen Asphyxiation
Fatal Accident at Valero Refinery
Delaware City, DE, November 5, 2005
Two contract employees were overcome and fatally injured by nitrogen as they performed maintenance work near a 24-inch opening on the top of a reactor. One of the workers died attempting rescue.
- published: 27 Aug 2008
- views: 70730
5:06

Hand vs. Liquid Nitrogen - Revisited
I go back to sticking my hand into liquid nitrogen but remain uninjured due to the Leidenf...
published: 19 Jul 2010
Hand vs. Liquid Nitrogen - Revisited
I go back to sticking my hand into liquid nitrogen but remain uninjured due to the Leidenfrost effect.
The Leidenfrost effect is the formation of a gas barrier between a hot surface and a boiling liquid if the temperature difference is great enough. This gas barrier greatly slows the heat transfer between the two and allows the liquid to last longer and consequently the hot surface to remain hot longer. This effect can be seen in a frying pan as it's being heated. At first the water quickly boils as it's dropped in but at a hot enough temperature the Leidenfrost effect takes over and makes the water skate around the surface lasting a very long time.
Liquid nitrogen vs. a room temperature object will also exhibit the effect preventing it from instantly freezing the object... such as my hand.
- published: 19 Jul 2010
- views: 422765
1:49

BREAK HEARTS with Liquid Nitrogen
Most people break hearts with words. Nerds break hearts with Liquid Nitrogen!
Disclaime...
published: 13 Feb 2010
BREAK HEARTS with Liquid Nitrogen
Most people break hearts with words. Nerds break hearts with Liquid Nitrogen!
Disclaimer: This is actually a pig's heart that was obtained from a pig that was already being processed into food products. No humans were harmed, or unlawful suffering to animals was caused outside of established food industry practices.
- published: 13 Feb 2010
- views: 907775
4:44

Solid Nitrogen, Vacuum Cooling and Dry Ice
What happens when you decrease the pressure around a liquid? It boils. Water boils at room...
published: 24 Sep 2012
Solid Nitrogen, Vacuum Cooling and Dry Ice
What happens when you decrease the pressure around a liquid? It boils. Water boils at room temperature once the pressure is low enough. What is interesting is that this decreases the temperature of the liquid. The fastest molecules escape, leaving the slower ones behind.
Using this trick with liquid nitrogen, it is possible to create solid nitrogen at a temperature of -210C. We then poured the solid and liquid nitrogen mixture onto a tray of water. The surface of the water became so cold that CO2 solidified out of the atmosphere on its surface. Then, since CO2 does not pass through the liquid phase at atmospheric pressure, it was propelled on the water surface by jets of gas as it sublimed.
Huge thanks to the Palais de la Decouverte.
Music by Kevin MacLeod of Incompetech.com (Mirage)
- published: 24 Sep 2012
- views: 212263
1:00

Watermelon versus liquid nitrogen
Liquid nitrogen is used to destroy an uneaten watermelon. Prof. Matt McCluskey, Washington...
published: 11 Jul 2007
Watermelon versus liquid nitrogen
Liquid nitrogen is used to destroy an uneaten watermelon. Prof. Matt McCluskey, Washington State University (physics). July 4, 2007, REU picnic. Video: Gabriel Hanna.
http://www.physics.wsu.edu/Research/High-pressure/Matt.htm
- published: 11 Jul 2007
- views: 1795745
Vimeo results:
3:36

Keck in Motion
Keck Observatory operates two ten-meter telescopes atop the summit of Mauna Kea Hawai'i. ...
published: 08 Feb 2012
author: Andrew Cooper
Keck in Motion
Keck Observatory operates two ten-meter telescopes atop the summit of Mauna Kea Hawai'i. Keeping those telescopes on-sky every night is the summit crew of the Operations Department. This video is dedicated to the guys of the Keck daycrew who make it possible.
The video is a combination of two techniques. Many scenes were filmed as standard video then accelerated during editing to allow the motion to become clear. Examples of this are scenes of telescopes slewing and the interferometer delay lines moving.
Slower subjects, such as clouds or the stars moving across the sky, were photographed as time lapse. Here a large number of still images were taken. These are then processed and converted to video using Photoshop CS5 before loading into the video editing software, Adobe Premiere Elements. To construct the time lapse sequences sometimes required thousands of separate images, quickly filling memory cards and exhausting batteries. After dark it is long exposure time lapse that is used, with individual exposures often 15 seconds to one minute long.
Many of the nighttime scenes are lit by moonlight, this allowed good exposures while still capturing the telescopes with stars overhead. A moonlit exposure of 30 to 60seconds can often appear as if taken during the day, with the odd effect of having stars in a blue sky.
A number of cameras were used in capturing the imagery… A Canon G11, Canon 20Da, Canon 40D, Canon 60D and Canon 5D MkII were used for various scenes. This often involved cameras setup on tripods while programmed to take exposures for hours at a time.
I must give credit to many folks who helped get the shots… Giving suggestions, driving the telescope, avoiding extension cords, and generally putting up with cameras deployed to odd locations. Three scenes were photographed by fellow Keck engineer and photographer, Mark Devenot, specifically the optic handling scenes. Mark also made a number of useful suggestions that resulted in other scenes and improvements to the video.
Scene Guide...
0:00 Liz Chock performing her usual software magic from her office at headquarters, Canon 60D
0:12 The background is an ethernet switch in the Keck 2 computer room. The insets are a VXWorks boot script, the power light for the Keck 2 drive system, and the Keck 1 HBS oil pressure gauges coming up to operational pressure, Canon 60D
0:17 The Keck 2 telescope slewing 180° in azimuth, video at 10x real time, Canon 60D
0:23 The interferometer FTS corner cubes moving into beam, Canon 60D
0:26 A pencil beam shutter dropping into place, used to create a narrow laser beam for aligning interferometer optics, Canon 60D
0:28 Interferometer Fast Delay Lines moving along the tracks, video at 7x real time, Canon 60D
0:34 The Keck 2 telescope slewing at 7x real time, Canon 60D
0:39 The interferometer Long Delay Lines moving at 10x real time, Canopn 60D
0:44 Another shot of the interferometer fast delay lines at 6x real time, Canon 60D
0:50 The Keck 2 telescope slewing at 10x real time, Canon 60D
0:55 CNC milling of a spectrograph slitmask, 11x real time, Canon 60D
1:01 Cold vapor issuing from the liquid nitrogen dewar of FATCAT Secondary, 0.75x real time, Canon 60D
1:06 Clouds flowing behing the Keck telescopes, one frame every 5 seconds, Canon G11
1:12 David Lynn, Rodney Eisenhour and Grant Hill removing the ESI spectrograph from Keck 2, time lapse with one frame every two seconds, Canon G11
1:21 Ray Nyberg and Joe Gargiulo installing the LRIS Spectrograph into Keck 1, one frame every two seconds, Canon G11
1:28 George Wall and Steve Doyle stripping the old aluminum coating from a tertiary mirror in preparation for re-coating, photography by Mark Devenot, Canon 40D
1:34 The Segement Exchange Team removing a segement from Keck 1, photography by Mark Devenot, Canon 5DMkII
1:44 Transferring a segment from the crane to a handling cart on the dome floor, photography by Mark Devenot, Canon 5DMkII
1:50 George Wall cleaning the Keck 1 primary by spraying carbon dioxide snow, one frame every two seconds, Canon G11
1:56 Sunset as seen from the observatory roof, time lapse with one exposure every five seconds, Canon 60D
2:06 Keck 2 open and operating under a moonlit sky, time lapse 30 second exposures with a Canon 60D @ 17mm f/4.5 ISO1000
2:14 Keck 2 interior during observing, time lapse 30 second exposures with some moonlight, Canon 20Da @ 10mm f/5 ISO800
2:19 Orion rising across the field of view, time lapse from a fixed tripod, 2 second exposures with a Canon 60D @ 50mm f/2.4 ISO1000
2:26 Three lasers, Keck 1, Keck 2 and Subaru work the summit sky, 90 minutes of one minute exposures were used to contruct the sequence, Canon 60D @ 17mm f/4 ISO4000
2:37 Keck 2 interior during observing, time lapse 30 second exposures with bright moonlight, Canon 20Da @ 10mm f/5 ISO800
2:44 Looking down into the Keck 2 primary mirror during observing, time lapse and moonlit 30 second exposures, Canon 60D @ 17mm f/4 ISO1600
2
1:45

Elements of Perfection - Pt3 - Air
AIR You barely exist, yet you completely surround me.
With a perfect mix of 78% nitrogen, ...
published: 14 Jul 2011
author: Whistler Blackcomb
Elements of Perfection - Pt3 - Air
AIR You barely exist, yet you completely surround me.
With a perfect mix of 78% nitrogen, 21% oxygen
and 1% “miscellaneous” you deliver life to
every corner of our planet. And when I put you
between tire and Earth, you give life to my ride. So
thank you. whistlerbike.com/elements
27:14

Brewing TV - Episode 55: All About Stout
We are getting ready for St. Patrick's Day with stout on the brain! For the occasion, Jake...
published: 09 Feb 2012
author: Brewing TV
Brewing TV - Episode 55: All About Stout
We are getting ready for St. Patrick's Day with stout on the brain! For the occasion, Jake and Mike brew two beers. One is a Dry Irish Stout on par with the modern Guinness Draught, which we serve on nitrogen through a stout faucet. The other beer is a Single Stout Porter, based on a beer Guinness produced back in the 1880s. We put the beers up against each other in a taste test… and find out the secret to Chip's Chocolate Stout along the way. [Original postdate: February 10, 2012]
For related links and content, see:
http://www.northernbrewer.com/connect/episode/brewing-tv-episode-55-all-about-stout
2:04

Wylie Dufresne, Liquid Nitrogen, and Frozen Ice Cream Cookie Balls
Wylie Dufresne of WD-50 shows Adam Frucci of Gizmodo how he and his pastry chef use liquid...
published: 24 Aug 2009
author: Gizmodo
Wylie Dufresne, Liquid Nitrogen, and Frozen Ice Cream Cookie Balls
Wylie Dufresne of WD-50 shows Adam Frucci of Gizmodo how he and his pastry chef use liquid nitrogen to create ice cream balls perfectly encased in chocolate cookie crumbs. Mmmm, delicious!
Youtube results:
0:51

Coke Can in Liquid Nitrogen
This is so simple I can't think of a better video description than what you're seeing in t...
published: 25 Oct 2012
Coke Can in Liquid Nitrogen
This is so simple I can't think of a better video description than what you're seeing in the title right now. Other than maybe "Coke Can in Liquid Nitrogen narrated with creepy voice."
- published: 25 Oct 2012
- views: 351916
9:23

Nitrogen & Phosphorus Cycles: Always Recycle! Part 2 - Crash Course Ecology #9
Hank describes the desperate need many organisms have for nutrients (specifically nitrogen...
published: 01 Jan 2013
Nitrogen & Phosphorus Cycles: Always Recycle! Part 2 - Crash Course Ecology #9
Hank describes the desperate need many organisms have for nutrients (specifically nitrogen and phosphorus) and how they go about getting them via the nitrogen and phosphorus cycles.
Like Crash Course! http://www.facebook.com/YouTubeCrashCourse
Follow Crash Course! http://www.twitter.com/TheCrashCourse
Table of Contents
Nitrogen Cycle 1:46
Nitrogen Fixing Bacteria 2:32
Nitrifying Bacteria 3:24
Denitrifying Bacteria 4:34
Phosphorous Cycle 5:16
Lithosphere 5:27
Plants 5:56
Animals 5:56
Decomposers 5:56
Aquatic & Marine Ecosystems 6:24
Sedimentation & Weathering 6:55
Synthetic Fertilizers 7:23
References and image licenses for this episode can be found in the Google document here: http://dft.ba/-3fDT
- published: 01 Jan 2013
- views: 64753
8:23

Liquid Nitrogen and Fire!
A burning candle is placed in a container of liquid nitrogen! Filmed in front of a live st...
published: 28 Dec 2009
Liquid Nitrogen and Fire!
A burning candle is placed in a container of liquid nitrogen! Filmed in front of a live studio audience. Well, they were live when we started... [Closed Captioned]
- published: 28 Dec 2009
- views: 2290082
15:52

Playing with Liquid Nitrogen
It is what it says on the title :p
Big thank you to:
http://YouTube.com/rosannapansino
ht...
published: 19 Oct 2012
Playing with Liquid Nitrogen
It is what it says on the title :p
Big thank you to:
http://YouTube.com/rosannapansino
http://YouTube.com/husky
• Get epic OMFGCata gear!
http://goo.gl/BGfMe or http://www.rodeoarcade.com/collections/omfgcata
• Stay connected!
Twitter - http://twitter.com/omfgcata
Facebook - http://facebook.com/omfgaming
- published: 19 Oct 2012
- views: 464422