
Dry ice is some pretty handy stuff. Aside from keeping shipments of groceries and other perishables nice and cold, it’s perfect for producing billowing smoke, which is always nice to have if you’re throwing a high school dance.
Dry ice doesn’t just have the power to compel teens to shake their bodies, though, but coins and spoons too, as shown in these awesome videos.
YouTube user Leak Fische shows that all you need to produce the natural (and dance) phenomenon is a chunk of dry ice and some pocket change. Just grab a coin, jab it into the ice, and let it go!
Instantly, the coin starts vibrating, beating out a fast-tempo rhythm as it bounces off the hard ice. But while dry ice is a mainstay of Halloween parties and haunted houses, there’s no sorcery at play here, just science.
▼ Science: It’s like magic for smart people!
Below -78.5 degrees Celsius (-109.3 degrees Fahrenheit), dry ice is solid. Once its surface temperature rises above that, it sublimates, or converts to a gas without going through a liquid state, which is why it’s called “dry” ice.
Obviously, a block of dry ice is colder than a coin you have lying around your home (and if it’s not, for God’s sakes turn the heater on). Metal acts as a thermal conductor, and stabbing the coin into dry ice causes it to rapidly sublimate, which is why you can see bits of vapor coming off it as the coin oscillates back and forth.
The specific type of metal used seems to affect how quickly the process happens. Both the 100-yen coin Leak Fische uses first and the five-yen piece shown after get up to pretty good speeds, with the hole in the middle of the latter giving it its own unique pitch. The featherweight one-yen coin, though, doesn’t do quite as well, as it stops after about two seconds.
▼ Pressing the coin into the slit does cause some screeching, but you could get the same result by stabbing a human being with it.
Of course, coins aren’t the only things made out of metal, and you can make similar things happen with a variety of objects. For example, the Raku Raku Kagaku Jikken (Easy Science Experiments) channel shows that if you lay a spoon on a block of dry ice and close your eyes, you’d swear your alarm clock was going off.
▼ Where’s the snooze button?
Proof positive that not only is science fun, it’s noisy too.
Source: Labaq
Top image: YouTube
Insert images: RocketNews24, YouTube, Wikipedia/Cmglee, YouTube (2)







Suntory explains the simple science behind how it makes its amazing clear tea beverages【Video】
Japan’s master knife maker returns with a razor-sharp blade made out of plastic wrap【Video】
How do you make cosplayers levitate? Put them in a pool, like in these awesome videos 【Video】
How do they make those amazing life-size anime statues? We find out (and snap tons of pictures)
Disillusionment at Tsukiji’s tourist-target prices led us to a great ramen restaurant in Tokyo
Starbucks Japan releases new zodiac chilled cup drink for 2026
Why you shouldn’t call this food “Hiroshimayaki” if you’re talking to people from Hiroshima
Evangelion creator Hideaki Anno opens up about his latest bout with depression, movie delays
Naruto ninja village theme park area, Kyubi coaster being added to Parc Spirou Provence【Pics】
Green onion baths return to Japanese bathhouse to celebrate Labor Day
7-Eleven Japan starts new temporary luggage storage service in over 300 branches
Starbucks on a Shinkansen bullet train platform: 6 tips for using the automated store in Japan
Let’s take a tour of the best sushi in Tokyo’s Tsukiji Fish Market with Mr. Sato! (Part 1)
Japanese train-themed karaoke lets you belt out announcements without being a public nuisance
Starbucks teams up with 166-year-old Kyoto doll maker for Year of the Horse decorations【Photos】
Tokyo’s Tsukiji sushi neighborhood asks tour groups to stay away for the rest of the month
Street Fighter Hadouken Churros to be launched and eaten in Tokyo, Okami pudding on offer too
Japanese avoiding domestic travel as foreign tourists increase, possibly creating vicious cycle
Japanese woman mistaken for bear
Return of Totoro sequel short anime announced for Ghibli Park
Is this the most relaxing Starbucks in Japan?
More Shinkansen trains being added to Japan’s “golden route” to meet traveler demand
Japan’s human washing machines will go on sale to general public, demos to be held in Tokyo
Starbucks Japan unveils new Christmas goods and a rhinestone tumbler that costs 19,500 yen
Japanese train company is letting fans buy its actual ticket gates for their homes
Is China’s don’t-go-to-Japan warning affecting tourist crowds in Tokyo’s Asakusa neighborhood?
The 10 best day trips from downtown Tokyo【Survey】
Tokyo considering law requiring more trash cans following litter increase in heavily touristed area
Nintendo’s Kirby now delivering orders at Kura Sushi restaurants, but not in Japan
Survey asks foreign tourists what bothered them in Japan, more than half gave same answer
Japan’s deadliest food claims more victims, but why do people keep eating it for New Year’s?
We deeply regret going into this tunnel on our walk in the mountains of Japan
Studio Ghibli releases Kodama forest spirits from Princess Mononoke to light up your home
Major Japanese hotel chain says reservations via overseas booking sites may not be valid
Put sesame oil in your coffee? Japanese maker says it’s the best way to start your day【Taste test】
The top 10 annoying foreign tourist behaviors on trains, as chosen by Japanese people【Survey】
No more using real katana for tourism activities, Japan’s National Police Agency says
Starbucks Japan reveals new sakura drinkware collection, inspired by evening cherry blossoms
Leave a Reply