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Welcome to my channel Anime Lover This video is watching .Like, and Subscribe
If you have any anime and korean darma need guidance about anything, just comment below in the comment section.
Love you all.
Thanks for watching
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AnimalsTranscript
00:01It's time. Capacitor's charged. I should replace the accelerator with low-resistance copper alloy.
00:09Wind speed? About 2.8 knots. 41 degrees Fahrenheit. All conditions are optimal.
00:20Commence the experiment.
00:30Huh. Negative. Seems I'm not getting enough precision from the aluminum. Next I'll try custom projectiles to help offset the center of mass.
00:42Lower your firing angle by 1.27 degrees. It's not your gun's fault you missed your target. It's a matter of skill, not of equipment.
00:52So you believe you can hit the mark? No question.
01:01Well done. That was true elegance in motion. You calculated the trajectory with pure intuition.
01:08This is no ordinary firearm. Who made this thing? Was it you?
01:13Which thing are you referring to? The particle accelerator or ring launcher?
01:19The one you just demonstrated is called a rail gun. It utilizes the Lawrence force to fire projectiles with magnetism rather than gunpowder.
01:26Huh. Are you trying to start a revolution or something?
01:31An exciting proposition, to be honest.
01:34But for now, I simply wish to experiment and assess the rules and principles that govern all things.
01:40Science exists to reveal the inner workings of the world and pave the way for new discoveries.
01:44Aerospace engineering resulted in a space probe that captured the awe-inspiring scenery of Mars, 75,280,000 kilometers away.
01:55Meanwhile, quantum mechanics is unraveling the mysteries of the universe on a scale smaller than one quintillionth of a meter.
02:02The joy of science stems from the infinite possibilities. There's always more to discover.
02:09That's why science is inarguably elegant.
02:14You're one strange kid.
02:16I'm Stanley.
02:23A handshake.
02:25You heard of him?
02:27I'm well aware of the custom on a conceptual level.
02:30It's just...
02:35This is my first practical experience.
02:37Yeah, same here.
02:40My name is Zeno.
02:42Now Stanley, allow me to show you...
02:45The beauty...
02:46And the light of science.
02:56Our latest recruit is finally awake.
03:01Hope you slept well.
03:03Good morning, Dr. X.
03:04alex.
03:34探してただ探してる答え探しに 理性は好き物理性と本能と感情どれを捨てる
03:42拾ってきたもの誰かの肝心なもん 忘れ去られてしまった石を繋いで
03:49イメージの果て無限を掴め視界を走れ想像力と探求のリミット 未来へもがけ理解を開け諦めの先感情論飛び越えてみると
04:03サンセストは挑戦の優しい逆境に立つほどそそるぜ
04:10美しい世界至る大地の切れ仲間 芽生えたのは触れたいという希望
04:24魔物気と崩 before the tree失敗の前を選ぬ
04:36To be continued...
05:06But we ran into a little snag when we wound up in a science battle with that genius Zeno guy.
05:14We managed to capture our ship along with most of our men. As for our side...
05:19We kidnapped their leader. Dr. Zeno is ours!
05:23With key hostages on both sides, we agreed to make Corn City a neutral zone, at least for the time being.
05:29Which brings us to the present, fleeing for our lives on this teeny tiny boat!
05:34All while sniper extraordinaire Stanley Snyder and his fully armed special forces are in hot pursuit and exceptionally grumpy with us.
05:42They're coming after us in our own carrier to take Zeno back!
05:46It's all a bit overwhelming.
05:48Wait, is it even possible for us to live?
05:50Solid points. Our odds don't sound so great when you stop and think about it.
05:54We'd be dead meat. So we're going to have to keep dodging Stanley if we want to pull this off.
06:00It'd be a shame to croak before our next stop.
06:03South America.
06:05Ha ha! Not a moment to lose!
06:08We're going straight to the source of that twisted petrification beam!
06:11What if we find some big, bad petrification device or something?
06:16Woohoo!
06:17No telling what kind of amazing things we'll see!
06:20I can't wait to find out!
06:22I don't understand why you're getting so excited. You know we're on the run.
06:27Tell me something, Dr. Senku.
06:31Assuming we do find the source that's been awaiting discovery for thousands of years,
06:35have you considered?
06:39It may have been placed here by the man on the moon.
06:45Ah, so it has occurred to you.
06:48Well, yeah. It's impossible to miss.
06:50There's a stupid amount of radio waves coming at us from the moon's direction.
06:54We were bound to pick up on it.
06:56The top scientific minds of the new world have congregated at last.
07:01Imagine if we combined our intellect.
07:03We could monopolize that tech to create a fearsome new weapon.
07:08Super weapons don't move me one millimeter.
07:11We must work in tandem to solve the mystery of the petrification beam
07:15and how it correlates to the moon.
07:20As your former student, how can I disagree?
07:23I say we start by sharing everything we know.
07:26Very well.
07:27Let us demonstrate that science is elegant.
07:33Be ready to head out as soon as we're loaded up on fuel.
07:44Gotta hurry and get Zeno back.
07:47Hostages, move to the fortress!
07:51Watch where you're pointing that thing!
07:53Are you forgetting this is a ceasefire zone?
07:55We have exactly the same rights here as any of you people!
07:58I don't see Ginro anywhere.
08:06Where is he?
08:09Matsukaze!
08:11Master Ginro is hiding.
08:14I must save him.
08:16Stop lazing around and get moving!
08:18But he's badly hurt!
08:20There's no way he can walk like this!
08:22It's true.
08:24Keep this up, and he'll surely die.
08:27I threw the guy who's bleeding out in the med bay.
08:35You're sure it's a good idea to take him with us?
08:38It's fine.
08:39If he dies, we'll let the ocean have him.
08:41And if not, he'll be our hostage when we find the science brats.
08:44Matsukaze, it's up to you.
09:03Where'd everyone go?
09:05Master Ginro.
09:06My humble servant came back for me!
09:14He disappeared and left me all alone after you hit me!
09:17I had no idea what I should do!
09:19To think you hid away in the heart of the enemy ship all this time.
09:23I understand your plan, Brave Master.
09:26You seek to gather information to ensure we prevail over the enemy.
09:32Right, something like that.
09:34You know me way too well.
09:35Should've guessed you'd figure out my heroic plan.
09:38But then again, I made it pretty obvious.
09:40Here's the thing, though.
09:41I'm not sure this is the best use of my skills.
09:44Nope, it's not.
09:45I should probably get to safety.
09:47Maybe dial down the bravery.
09:49I shall guard you.
09:50It's the least I can do.
09:52Ah! Matsukaze!
09:54Ah! You're in bad shape!
09:56Please don't die on me!
09:57What am I supposed to do now?
10:00Oh!
10:00Ah!
10:01Ah!
10:04Anchors away on the Dr. Zeno search and rescue tour!
10:09Na-na-na-na-na-na-na-na-na-na-na-na-na!
10:13You can feel the music in the air!
10:30Time for a little torture.
10:33Or you could just tell us where your friends went off to with Zeno.
10:36Do what you will to me.
10:38Mere suffering won't entice me to betray my master's allies.
10:42I would rather die than reveal their destination to an enemy.
10:48Remain hidden, Master Keenro.
10:50No matter what happens to me, you must stand down.
10:53I'm just doing the right thing here, you know?
10:55I mean, it's his job to guard and my job to be guarded.
10:58Hiding like a coward is what any smart person would do.
11:01My mission is to stay safe.
11:03No matter how terrifyingly painful this ends up being for him.
11:06It's called South America!
11:10No clue where it is, but that's where they're going!
11:12That's where they're going!
11:20I'm so sorry!
11:22Matsukaze!
11:23Everyone!
11:24I don't know who's listening to this.
11:38It could be hundreds, maybe even thousands of years from now.
11:42Anyway, my name's Ishigami Byakuya.
11:46I'm an astronaut.
11:48Understood.
11:50Those in space at the time evaded the petrification beam.
11:54A small crew of astronauts, comprised of the Russians, Connie, Lillian, and him, Byakuya.
12:08He was a walking paradox who deftly wielded two incompatible forces, emotion and reason.
12:15Suffice it to say, we never quite saw eye to eye.
12:19But sending information to the future through records and storytelling, I would have expected no less from him.
12:38We've solved the mystery from up here in space.
12:41The origin of the petrification beam is South America.
12:45There's no telling what you'll find there.
12:47It's up to you scientists now.
12:49It's your future.
12:53We're gonna throw all our gray matter at crunching this precious information.
12:57Nothing can stop us.
12:58We will uncover the whole truth.
13:00One measured step at a time.
13:02Indeed.
13:03A perfect union.
13:04We'll combine efforts to pinpoint the exact longitude and latitude.
13:08And discover the origin of the mystery beam that petrified all of humanity thousands of years ago.
13:14I love tea and all, but really, don't we have important things to do?
13:25It would be rude to interrupt them when we can't contribute.
13:28Am I wrong?
13:29Wild that the two top scientists across millennia are collaborating down there.
13:34Chrome, how come you're acting extra restless?
13:39You don't know what you're saying!
13:40I'm not restless at all!
13:41Nope!
13:42That's not very convincing.
13:45Hey, Francois!
13:46I'll carry the tea and snacks down for you!
13:50He's desperate for any excuse to listen in while those two talk science.
13:54Then I know what they're up to.
14:07Huh?!
14:12That's bad!
14:15I've never seen bubbles that big before!
14:17Come on guys, this looks hella fun!
14:18You gotta let me in on this action!
14:20Right now!
14:21Why are you just playing around?!
14:23We are not playing!
14:24It's a model!
14:25It's as simple as throwing a little bit of glycerin on the surfactant we made for shampoo,
14:30creating a reaction that produces giant super bubbles.
14:34And is there a reason he's roaming free?
14:36Sure!
14:37We're doing important work here.
14:38He won't try to run.
14:39Okay!
14:40I finished the round spinny thing you asked for!
14:44Perfect!
14:45Elegant work, craftsman!
14:46Consider!
14:47Consider!
14:48The petrification device goes off somewhere in Brazil.
14:55A planet-scale beam spreads over a radius of 12,800 kilometers, engulfing the Earth.
15:01The resulting calamity drove humanity to near extinction thousands of years ago.
15:05Whoa!
15:06That makes sense!
15:08Don't tell me you needed a playset to explain that!
15:12To arrive at a truly elegant solution, one must start with elegant tools.
15:16I think I get why Xeno built that bad castle.
15:18All Senku seems to care about is function and practicality, but it seems like you're a lot more into how stuff looks, aren't you, Xeno?
15:26Oh crap!
15:27I just thought of something!
15:28So, yeah, I'm pretty sure what I'm seeing here doesn't add up.
15:33If this model's correct, then from Senku's perspective on the other side of the planet,
15:38the petrification beam should have come from the ground, right?
15:42Absolutely.
15:44Except that's not how it happened.
15:46It came from beyond the horizon, like an enormous tidal wave.
15:51That discrepancy's a hint, and we're gonna follow it wherever it leads.
15:56Okay, so we've just gotta figure out why the light came from the side instead of from below like we would've thought.
16:02This is gut talk, but what if the beam takes longer to pass through the ground for some science reason?
16:07Maybe it's cramped underground, and then that slows it down just enough, you know?
16:12Well now, a most fascinating hypothesis.
16:16Yet gut instincts are of no consequence to a true scientist.
16:20All that matters to us is demonstrating that a phenomenon is objectively reproducible.
16:26So we objectively reproduce?
16:31Picture this for me.
16:32One of your crewmates is rather adamant that they can see ghosts.
16:35Do you believe a man of science would be interested in a claim like that?
16:40Well, no, because ghosts don't exist.
16:43Zero points. Scientists with ten billion percent study the hell out of it.
16:47But only if these alleged ghosts kept causing the same effects to happen over and over again. Reliably.
16:53This person's initial hypothesis is that they can see ghosts.
16:58It's supremely irrelevant whether or not it's true, because saying it won't pique anyone's curiosity.
17:03Unless... there's some effect that anyone can reproduce.
17:07Something like a slight drop in temperature whenever the so-called ghosts are present.
17:10That temperature difference could generate a crap ton of electricity paired with a sterling engine.
17:16A ghost generator? I must admit it sounds rather elegant.
17:20Such a discovery could perhaps even solve humanity's energy crisis.
17:24There's a lot more to science than obsessing over practicality.
17:27We're ridiculously off topic.
17:30Says the guy who turned the ghosts into a generator.
17:33Back to my point.
17:35We must now pursue reproducibility of the petrification beam.
17:39It's the only way to reconcile our respective truths.
17:42As for me, I was petrified in the middle of the day at precisely twelve forty and twenty seconds.
17:46It happened at exactly eight twenty-five in the evening for me.
17:50We were gathered at Pinnacles National Park when the event took place.
17:54So if we account for the difference in time zones, it arrived in Tokyo fifteen minutes and twenty seconds later.
18:00Meaning it would have taken a few dozen minutes to envelop the entire planet.
18:05That's hella weird, don't you think?
18:08I don't get what's so weird about it.
18:11The space station Byakya and his team were on.
18:13It's not like it just sat in the same spot that whole time.
18:17While it was up there, it flew around and around the Earth.
18:20In a few dozen minutes, it would have easily completed half of a loop.
18:24So you're saying there's no way it could have avoided the petrification beam?
18:30Correct.
18:32We must then conclude that the wave of light covered the planet at a rather low altitude.
18:36In fact, it couldn't have been a light.
18:38It would have traveled faster if it were.
18:40It could be a luminous substance.
18:43And if the front float across the surface, held down by gravity, that would match both of our observations.
18:49That hypothesis is just the start, paired with empirical observations gleaned from our vantage points.
18:55Our next mission is to calculate the angle from which the light came.
18:59We'll have to account for the temperature and weather at the time.
19:01Oh, not soon. Come on.
19:02Oh my. This is indeed quite elegant. I have no doubt that this line of reasoning will lead us to new discoveries.
19:07The joy of science stems from the infinite possibilities. There's always more to discover.
19:13Krom sure has taken his sweet time, isn't he? He went out spying and never came back.
19:14Oh my. This is indeed quite elegant. I have no doubt that this line of reasoning will lead us to new discoveries.
19:18Oh my. This is indeed quite elegant. I have no doubt that this line of reasoning will lead us to new discoveries.
19:23The joy of science stems from the infinite possibilities. There's always more to discover.
19:34Krom sure has taken his sweet time, isn't he? He went out spying and never came back.
19:39If we start at the first moment we saw the light on the horizon.
19:56And stop the very instant we were petrified.
20:0056 seconds passed.
20:02The petrification beam. It stays the same. I mean it doesn't change speed as it's growing.
20:15Well done, Krom. That discovery is a stupidly useful and reproducible tool in our arsenal.
20:23Constant speed. Now tell me, how high into the air did the petrification beam rise above the surface?
20:28Well, it did petrify anyone who was traveling in a plane at the time.
20:32We'll estimate that the light reached 20,000 meters in altitude.
20:35Assuming the atmosphere's refractive index is 1.06, the horizon would have shown 500 kilometers away.
20:41If we could travel that distance in 56 seconds then the beam's speed was...
20:45Ah! I've got it! 32,000 kilometers per hour!
20:48Your location was petrified 15 minutes and 20 seconds ahead of mine.
20:52Therefore, if we simply construct the shortest distance line from the epicenter and run it along the Earth's ellipsoid,
20:57the point that's exactly 8,181 kilometers away should be the spot we're looking for.
21:03Agreed. That is most definitely correct.
21:07Therefore what though? What is your there even foring?
21:09You two finished your calculations before I knew what was happening, which I still don't!
21:13Just need the angle. A ballpark would work.
21:16I concur. These are all guesses.
21:18But if we keep combining our educated approximations, the solution will emerge on its own.
21:24I recall celestial bodies, and the shadows that I observed.
21:28In that case, we'll place the seven sky trees to the left.
21:34We never could have arrived at these conclusions individually.
21:38Yet by bringing our minds together...
21:43We can triumph.
21:44Two lines can only intersect one way, at one point.
21:55Three degrees, seven minutes south.
21:58Sixty degrees, one minute west.
22:01That's where we'll find the origin of this entire mystery.
22:04This is exhilarating. Get excited!
22:13Did you cry?
22:14Don't fall!
22:19Two inches, two inches, one Deus.
22:21Give a wish.
22:25No,永信Bayou G Key, note you nasty is that you are why you areabol Docker.
22:26Yes, spirit, one step.
22:28We are flowing with ease.
22:30It is forever let's face.
22:32It is forever let's face.
22:35When someone passes out slowly Kotomi called OAMOSret.
23:09I'm so happy that I'm not going to die.
23:16I'm so happy that I'm going to get my heart out.
23:23I'm not going to die.
23:29I'm happy that I'm not going to die.
23:37I'm going to take you to the end of the day
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