How Japanese Masters Turn Sand Into Swords

Veritasium
Contributed By
Veritasium
Resource Type
Instructional Resource
Keywords
veritasium science physics katanas japanese swords sword making samurai swords
Subjects
Science
Related Resources

How Japanese Masters Turn Sand Into Swords

This is a video about how Japanese samurai swords, aka katanas, are made – from the gathering of the iron sand, to the smelting of the steel, to the forging of the blade. Head over to https://hensonshaving.com/veritasium and enter code 'Veritasium' for 100 free blades with the purchase of a razor. Make sure to add both the razor and the blades to your cart for the code to take effect.

Special thanks to our Patreon supporters! Join this list to help us keep our videos free, forever:

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If you’re looking for a molecular modeling kit, try Snatoms, a kit I invented where the atoms snap together magnetically - https://ve42.co/SnatomsV

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A massive thank you to John McBride for making this entire project happen. This would not have been possible without John. Please check out his japan walking tours https://walkjapan.com/

Massive thanks to Craig Mod, Inoue-san, everyone in the Tanabe family, and Takanashi-san. Also a massive thank you to Kevin Cashen – https://cashenblades.com/

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References:

Tanii, H., Inazumi, T., & Terashima, K. (2014). Mineralogical study of iron sand with different metallurgical characteristic to smelting with use of Japanese classic iron-making furnace “Tatara”. ISIJ international, 54(5), 1044-1050.

Tate, M. (2005). History of Iron and Steel Making Technology in Japan Mainly on the smelting of iron sand by Tatara. Tetsu-to-Hagane, 91(1), 2-10.

Krauss, G. (1999). Martensite in steel: strength and structure. Materials science and engineering: A, 273, 40-57.

Krauss, G., & Marder, A. R. (1971). The morphology of martensite in iron alloys. Metallurgical Transactions, 2, 2343-2357.

Yalçın, Ü. (1999). Early iron metallurgy in Anatolia. Anatolian Studies, 49, 177-187.

Kapp, L., Kapp, H., & Yoshihara, Y. (1987). The craft of the Japanese sword. Kodansha International.

Matsumoto, C., Das, A. K., Ohba, T., Morito, S., Hayashi, T., & Takami, G. (2013). Characteristics of Japanese sword produced from tatara steel. Journal of Alloys and Compounds, 577, S673-S677.

Inoue, T. (2010). Tatara and the Japanese sword: the science and technology. Acta Mechanica, 214(1), 17-30.

Images & Video:

Great video from NHK – https://ve42.co/NHK

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Special thanks to our Patreon supporters:

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Directed by Petr Lebedev

Written by Petr Lebedev and Derek Muller

Edited by Trenton Oliver, Jack Saxon, Peter Nelson

Animated by Fabio Albertelli, Jakub Misiek, David Szakaly

Filmed by Petr Lebedev and Lui Kimishima

Produced by Petr Lebedev, Derek Muller, Han Evans, Giovanna Utichi, Emily Taylor

Additional research by Gregor Čavlović

Thumbnail by Peter Sheppard

Additional video/photos supplied by Getty Images

Music from Epidemic Sound

Publisher
Veritasium

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