Maxim Bilovitskiy

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Maxim Bilovitskiy ignites a "Barking Dog" reaction in 2014.

Maxim Bilovitskiy (born in Maardu, Estonia, on 8 November 1992) is an Estonian Youtuber and scientific photographer.

In 2011, he created the Russian YouTube channel "Thoisoi."[1] As of September 2021 his channel has amassed more than 240 million views and over 1.7 million subscribers.[2] His hobby is popularizing science and creating educational videos.[1] In 2014, he created a second channel for his English speaking followers. That channel has over 840,000 subscribers and has more than 100 million views.[3]

In 2014, he graduated from Tallinn University of Technology of Chemical and Materials Technology with a Faculty of Food Technology and Product Development undergraduate degree. In 2016, he earned his master's degree in the same university.

In 2015, his video of superconductor properties won in the Estonian science photo competition in the category of "other media files," and his other photograph of lactose crystals was the second-place winner of the "microscope photographs." His YBCO superconductor video went on to win the European Science Photo Competition in the non-photographic media category.[4]

He won the Wiki Science Competition 2017 in the category of non-photographic media with a video of a frozen drop of water in a very cold environment.[5] In Wiki Science Competition 2019 his video of the growth of silver crystals on the surface of copper from a solution of silver nitrate was listed among runners-up in the same category.[6]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b ПАВЛОВА, ЕКАТЕРИНА (May 29, 2016). "Первый и единственный химик-видеоблогер в Эстонии с 37 миллионами просмотров снимает эксперименты прямо в саду в Маарду [The first and only chemist videobloger in Estonia with 37 million views photographs experiments directly in the garden in Maardu]" (in Russian). AS SL Õhtuleht. Вечёрка. Archived from the original on 3 July 2017. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
  2. ^ Thoisoi channel in YouTube
  3. ^ Thoisoi2 channel in YouTube
  4. ^ "Commons:European Science Photo Competition 2015/Winners". Wikimedia Commons. Archived from the original on 22 April 2017. Retrieved 16 May 2017.
  5. ^ "Winners of WSC: Non-photographic media" wikisciencecompetition.org
  6. ^ "Winners of WSC19: Non-photographic media" wikisciencecompetition.org


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