Four More Theories about the Universe to Blow Your Mind

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Sideprojects

Sideprojects

Күн бұрын

Unlock the mysteries of the universe with mind-blowing theories! Discover how supermassive black holes predate the Big Bang, the secrets of the elusive Great Attractor, and the mind-bending concept of a holographic universe. Prepare to be amazed!
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Пікірлер: 776
@davemoon8206
@davemoon8206 11 ай бұрын
The Universe will end when it can no longer contain all of Simon's channels
@justinsadowski9823
@justinsadowski9823 11 ай бұрын
Next week Simon is gonna drop a new video on how to cook Carolina BBQ short ribs in a Crock Pot
@W1LDTANG
@W1LDTANG 11 ай бұрын
@@justinsadowski9823 Yo, I'm bout to get mine started in the crockpot, in just a few hours... Seen this reply, and 🤔.... Lmao. Thought it was something though seeing your reply, as it was really unexpected, and random (yes I know that was the whole point, but still...), and kinda crazy being I've been planning on cooking some myself for a few days now. Anyway, *_🍻🍻🍻Cheers🍻🍻🍻_* mate! *_🇺🇸🐍🇺🇸_*
@drewishaf
@drewishaf 11 ай бұрын
Simon is actually the AI's interface to humans. It wants us not to fear, so it made a quirky Brit that nobody questions how he gets 68 hours of content made per day, every day...
@JelleTheTunes
@JelleTheTunes 11 ай бұрын
Not when, if
@tommyrotton9468
@tommyrotton9468 11 ай бұрын
your universe has suffered a 404 error
@randalpumpkin2788
@randalpumpkin2788 11 ай бұрын
Dear Simon, we absolutely adore space themes on sideprojects. The last few months have been full of them and its been a blast! Keep them coming, please
@F_L_U_X
@F_L_U_X 11 ай бұрын
Agreed
@beethimbles8801
@beethimbles8801 11 ай бұрын
Me too ✋
@swiftycortex
@swiftycortex 11 ай бұрын
Yes more please. Thank uou
@darlenefraser3022
@darlenefraser3022 11 ай бұрын
Same here! This is awesome!
@infernotyphoon
@infernotyphoon 11 ай бұрын
Agreed
@nicholassergeant3041
@nicholassergeant3041 11 ай бұрын
It’s also a popular theory that the supermassives were what is called a direct collapse black hole. Matter was so dense in the beginning that certain objects simply collapsed into black holes before even becoming stars.
@omega311888
@omega311888 11 ай бұрын
ive heard that one as well
@QBCPerdition
@QBCPerdition 11 ай бұрын
That's where I, as a lay person, place my bets.
@ancientcolors
@ancientcolors 11 ай бұрын
I like the concept of black hole stars as an explanation, kurzgesagt did a video about it
@benvaun1330
@benvaun1330 11 ай бұрын
hypothesis. not theory.
@hoonaticbloggs5402
@hoonaticbloggs5402 11 ай бұрын
@@benvaun1330 You mean like even the existence of black holes? Ever been to one ?
@Frankie5Angels150
@Frankie5Angels150 11 ай бұрын
There is a theory which says if anyone ever figures out the universe it will instantly be replaced by something even more unfathomable. There is another theory that says this has already happened. - Douglas Adams, Hitchhikers Guide to the Universe
@DrDeuteron
@DrDeuteron 11 ай бұрын
nerd!
@dallesamllhals9161
@dallesamllhals9161 11 ай бұрын
42
@ChurchNietzsche
@ChurchNietzsche 11 ай бұрын
Universe? ... are you sure?
@hrma6313
@hrma6313 11 ай бұрын
And it's the Gib Gnab, not some stupid crunch
@charlesjenkins7130
@charlesjenkins7130 11 ай бұрын
You think it's a long way to the chemist....
@brianjamesthomas
@brianjamesthomas 11 ай бұрын
The Great Attractor was discovered to likely be the Vela Supercluster, discovered in 2016 and of sufficient mass to explain the Great Attractor.
@Ski_3_p_o
@Ski_3_p_o 11 ай бұрын
Just sucks it happens to reside in the zone of avoidance so we can’t know for sure.
@niftybass
@niftybass 11 ай бұрын
​@@Ski_3_p_oOver the last few years, scientists (astronomers) have become a lot better at being able to see thru it .
@ChurchNietzsche
@ChurchNietzsche 11 ай бұрын
I heard The Great Attractor caused the 1977 NYC blackout, with Earth's first SUPERBALL
@dianapennepacker6854
@dianapennepacker6854 11 ай бұрын
No no No! That is a cover up theory. It is a galactic monster or being swallowing all mass! Or a civilization trying to fight against heat death!!! Don't let them fool you there allliiiieeeeennns now and the federal government is going after the rogue elements or black projects covering up as I speak!!!
@kingyoung5228
@kingyoung5228 11 ай бұрын
It's the Laniakea Supercluster which is in turn being pulled by the shapely cluster this cluster being so massive that it exerts a gravitational pull on everything in our region of space every galaxy is moving towards this location
@romanwolf0072
@romanwolf0072 11 ай бұрын
I love how the universe is a side project
@DrDeuteron
@DrDeuteron 11 ай бұрын
yeah, for God
@scottbishop7899
@scottbishop7899 11 ай бұрын
Just need Simon to expand on this so it makes the grade of becoming a Megaproject 😆 🤣 😂
@HBrooks
@HBrooks 11 ай бұрын
in an infinite universe, with no beginning and no end, there's also no end to your kickass videos. informative and mind-expanding. thanks for the effort!
@ThatWriterKevin
@ThatWriterKevin 11 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed!
@samuelbraziel6267
@samuelbraziel6267 5 ай бұрын
​@ThatWriterKevin Kevin when did simon let you out of the basement😂
@HBrooks
@HBrooks 5 ай бұрын
lol.. i broke out. :P@@samuelbraziel6267
@jackbuff_I
@jackbuff_I 11 ай бұрын
Cool video this.. fascinating! The 2D into 3D just feels right for some reason! .. the joint I just smoked probably helped though..
@beethimbles8801
@beethimbles8801 11 ай бұрын
I love how SMBH sounds like it was named by a child ❤
@julianaylor4351
@julianaylor4351 11 ай бұрын
It was in the toy box. 😁
@ThatWriterKevin
@ThatWriterKevin 11 ай бұрын
A LOT of science terms sound that way, like spaghetification or weekly interactive particles called WIMPs
@omega311888
@omega311888 11 ай бұрын
@@ThatWriterKevin spaghetification just makes me hungry for pasta 😁
@ThatWriterKevin
@ThatWriterKevin 11 ай бұрын
@@omega311888 It is one of the greatest scientific terms ever
@mrboonski1
@mrboonski1 11 ай бұрын
7:50 Had me in stitches 🤘👊🤌🤣🤣🤣
@zed4225
@zed4225 11 ай бұрын
Thanks Simon, for everything I didn't know, for everything i'm yet to learn. It's great to hear a presenter who is not over dramatic on these subjects. You do a great job.
@techn1kal1ty
@techn1kal1ty 11 ай бұрын
White Hole: one of my favorite Red Dwarf episodes!
@sheparian9981
@sheparian9981 11 ай бұрын
Kryten:Long explonation about white holes. Cat:So,what is it?
@speckledjim_
@speckledjim_ 11 ай бұрын
​@@sheparian9981 Kryten - another long explanation about white holes. Cat - So what is it?
@ignitionfrn2223
@ignitionfrn2223 11 ай бұрын
0:35 - Chapter 1 - Supermassive black holes may predate the big bang 3:25 - Chapter 2 - The great attractor 6:45 - Chapter 3 - White holes 9:40 - Chapter 4 - The holographic universe
@Loralanthalas
@Loralanthalas 11 ай бұрын
I love space. Simon's pretty ok too.
@Enjoymentboy
@Enjoymentboy 11 ай бұрын
I like the idea that some of the supermassive black holes were actually formed from "shrapnel" from the big bang. That when the singularity "exploded" it did not do so evenly and some chunks were left that were still dense enough to remain as mini-singularities.
@kingyoung5228
@kingyoung5228 11 ай бұрын
Singularities don't exist
@alipetuniashow
@alipetuniashow 11 ай бұрын
@@kingyoung5228they do
@dukeofthedance8062
@dukeofthedance8062 11 ай бұрын
Love your new studio lighting. I have a tv from 2003 I'll never replace even when it goes out that gets burn pretty bad from that bright pink light that will stay for hours and then go away. This is much better.
@johnfyten3392
@johnfyten3392 11 ай бұрын
Bring on the existential dread Simon
@petermcgill1315
@petermcgill1315 4 ай бұрын
As the saying goes, the universe isn’t weirder than we imagine. It’s weirder than we can imagine.
@BasicStealthcamping
@BasicStealthcamping 11 ай бұрын
my probably wrong theory on the 'great attractor' is it could possibly be a new class of SMBH, but galactic in scale. if it was as large as this, it would be harder for an accretion disc to form with enough density to give the usual radiation signatures we see on other black holes. maybe. i dont know
@user-kw6uh2ki4m
@user-kw6uh2ki4m 11 ай бұрын
that might tie nicely into the whole "dark energy IS black holes and black holes have vacuum energy" theory.
@Halfrightfox
@Halfrightfox 11 ай бұрын
More STEM topics please and thank you
@happykillmore349
@happykillmore349 11 ай бұрын
The Big Ceunch went away after we proved the universe was expanding at an accelerated rate
@DrDeuteron
@DrDeuteron 11 ай бұрын
but why? Maybe it will turn around?
@gregburns1783
@gregburns1783 7 ай бұрын
Thank you for putting time and effort into this. It boggles my mind and you help un-boggle it a bit.
@PlanetXMysteries-pj9nm
@PlanetXMysteries-pj9nm 6 ай бұрын
ery impressed with this video. I have always been interested in astronomy and physics. It was things like this that drove me to enter those professions. Thank you for feeding my insatiable curiosity about the universe and the wonders that we discove
@multiyapples
@multiyapples 11 ай бұрын
This is incredibly fascinating.
@TauGDS
@TauGDS 11 ай бұрын
Simon: "It's a white hole" My brain, immediately: "So what is it?"
@SpaceWhaIe
@SpaceWhaIe 11 ай бұрын
I've never seen one before, no one has, but I'm guessing it's a white hole.
@dianapennepacker6854
@dianapennepacker6854 11 ай бұрын
Fuck my life. It is the universe being politically correct! Ugh can't hide from the libs. Wait no!! It is the Patriarchy controlling us! White males strike again!!!
@mrthwibble
@mrthwibble 11 ай бұрын
​@@SpaceWhaIe So what is it?
@daddyd0c
@daddyd0c 11 ай бұрын
Science! Pretty much everything we know for certain will be eventually disproven. 🤔 ☺
@chad0219
@chad0219 11 ай бұрын
Love these videos, reminds me about how much we don't know.
@JanneGlass
@JanneGlass 11 ай бұрын
My small brain is having trouble fitting this all in 😂 But immensely interesting and humbling to know there are big brains that can actually understand and research this stuff
@cookiemonster2299
@cookiemonster2299 11 ай бұрын
I've always liked the idea that because everything in the universe is made from the same stuff then humans are the universe observing and trying to understand itself. 🤷🙂👍
@heatamechheatpumps602
@heatamechheatpumps602 11 ай бұрын
The most amazing explanation of the timeline of our planet I have ever seen.
@ShawnHCorey
@ShawnHCorey 11 ай бұрын
The JWST has discovered a very early galaxy that is only 50 light years in diameter yet is producing stars at a rate similar to what our Milkyway is doing today. Galaxies like this could be the source of super-massive back holes.
@hoonaticbloggs5402
@hoonaticbloggs5402 11 ай бұрын
Early? Our human concept of time has no place in the universe. Our ways of measuring the universe are inadequate
@milton1969able
@milton1969able 11 ай бұрын
Simon Et Al will you please sort your sound levels out, I almost just blew my speakers out. Across your channels the levels are never the same. P.S. love your work ;)
@PRCOM
@PRCOM 11 ай бұрын
Mention of the white hole reminded me of Red Dwarf 😂😂😂
@HoundMonkey
@HoundMonkey 11 ай бұрын
Where my cat people at?
@PRCOM
@PRCOM 11 ай бұрын
@@HoundMonkey awwwwwwowww 🤜🤛
@Engalow
@Engalow 22 күн бұрын
Reminded me my wife
@PRCOM
@PRCOM 22 күн бұрын
@@Engalow 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣that was too funny 🤣🤣 belter
@paydro24
@paydro24 11 ай бұрын
Once again, my mind is completely blown by these videos...🎉
@tat2mommie
@tat2mommie 11 ай бұрын
All I can hear is Professor Farnsworth: “All the zones have names like that in the Galaxy of Terror.”
@Mirthandirxiii
@Mirthandirxiii 2 ай бұрын
Good news!
@bronwynbrin
@bronwynbrin 11 ай бұрын
Every time you said Supermassive Black Hole, I couldn't help but think of the song my Muse
@gunnoreekie
@gunnoreekie 11 ай бұрын
Ahhh Simon, the bespectacled bearded font of interesting information, love your work
@brandoncarson6061
@brandoncarson6061 10 ай бұрын
Man I love Simon tube so many good channels this man must work 24/7
@mrmagoo.3678
@mrmagoo.3678 11 ай бұрын
Fantastic Episode Simon & Crew. spaced me right out..s'cuse the pun :D
@teddyinjapan
@teddyinjapan 11 ай бұрын
What’s the deal Babish? You didn’t cook a single thing
@finscreenname
@finscreenname 5 ай бұрын
I think that Super Massive Black Holes cause the big bang. When enough of them combine, bam and you have another big bang. What has not been sucked up in the super, super massive black hole just gets blown outside of the new universe.
@mikeellingburg9677
@mikeellingburg9677 10 ай бұрын
Can we get more of these? I for one really enjoy these
@MikeGarland__
@MikeGarland__ 11 ай бұрын
The fact the black holes can predate the big bang is mind blowing because that means the universe is so much older that we thought which makes me feel even smaller than before which is also beautiful.
@contumelious-8440
@contumelious-8440 11 ай бұрын
I have always been a fan of the cyclic universe theory. Somehow, knowing that all the Universe would someday contract into a point and explode into a new Universe was comforting. Matter that was outside the big bang feels like confirmation.
@newagain9964
@newagain9964 11 ай бұрын
It’s nonsense.
@Its__Good
@Its__Good 11 ай бұрын
Relativity actually works on all things bigger than subatomic particles. It makes more sense to say that quantum mechanics is the science of the very small and relativity is the science of everything else.
@DrDeuteron
@DrDeuteron 11 ай бұрын
which relativity? Special realtitivty + QM = quantum field theory, the most successful scientific theory ever. General R + QM = garbage out.
@kmatcyk
@kmatcyk 11 ай бұрын
Nice job everyone. Very professional
@davidleedougherty6478
@davidleedougherty6478 11 ай бұрын
It's actually more useful to listen to these without watching. As much as i enjoy the images, the scales are impossibly incomprehensible, especially when trying to gauge with the eyes
@jmanj3917
@jmanj3917 11 ай бұрын
2:30 The possibility of a Big Crunch was ruled out years ago, when we measured the mass-energy content of the universe and saw that there isn't enough mass-energy to overcome the expansion caused by Dark Energy.
@Giavani-wq7gb
@Giavani-wq7gb 11 ай бұрын
Fascinating presentation. My personal take is that the sphere is the most plausible shape of the universe, and that there is a massive proportion not detectable. The universe is likened to earth in that matter migrates like tectonic plates across the medium, even ending (or beginning) by colliding in unimaginable explosions on the other side of this universal sphere. I imagined the image of galaxies at the distant limits were like the sun setting or rising and an optical illusion produces a larger object. Could these galaxies be disappearing over the horizon of a spherical universe giving the same impression? At first it seems the universe is flat due to the incredible distances involved. Maybe we haven't even seen the half of creation.
@bazzer124
@bazzer124 11 ай бұрын
To me, the coolest thing about the universe is that it seems we know everything and absolutely nothing about it - at the same time. Take SMBHs possibly being older than the big bang due to a "cyclic" universe expanding and then contracting. As of now, no one can say for sure if that is even possible given theories like the big RIP. Dark energy overtook the force of gravity millions of years ago as the strongest spacial influence in the universe kinda eliminating the potential of the big CRUNCH due to expansion (ie, the universe is ~14.5B years old but its diameter is ~90B light years). Everything and nothing at the same time. Fascinating, Captain. Cheers....
@fordid42
@fordid42 8 ай бұрын
May not even need a Big Crunch to start a new universe. Just a quantum fluctuation down the road a little bit (10^10^10^76 years, decades, seconds... doesn't matter with a number that huge). Could take into consideration the leftover particles from heat death and expansion. Maybe, I could be talking out of my behind.
@lawrencearvizu2626
@lawrencearvizu2626 9 ай бұрын
!!Bravo!!
@AthAthanasius
@AthAthanasius 11 ай бұрын
What really blows my mind is that science communication is still using the term 'theory' when they actually mean 'hypothesis'.
@kingyoung5228
@kingyoung5228 11 ай бұрын
This comment deserves infinitely more attention. Unfortunately, most people do not know any better.
@brendakrieger7000
@brendakrieger7000 11 ай бұрын
Thanks🌌🔭
@Unalochy
@Unalochy 11 ай бұрын
This feels more like a 'Science Unbound' episode. Happy im subbed to all your channels so i dont miss out during moments like this 👍
@ThatWriterKevin
@ThatWriterKevin 11 ай бұрын
There is definitely overlap sometimes, but this stuff seems to do really well on this channel. Maybe I'll have to write the next one over there!
@Unalochy
@Unalochy 11 ай бұрын
@ThatWriterKevin Kevin, it is an absolute honor and a pleasure! The Deepest Internet Mysteries video series on the Decoding The Unknown channel has become the go-to vids that I've pulled up and watched with friends multiple times when things seem to calm and start to drag on during get-togethers. I would like to directly thank you for the immense fun your writing has brought. Your writing is so on point that I have had some friends rewatch videos they saw months earlier at a separate gathering get excited and help drive the interest, and they still don't get the stories correctly the second time because of your bravado and skill interweaving crazy real stories with similarly crazy fiction (with amazing nerd references) 🖤 As a viewer, I do what I can to appease the youtube algorithm gods, likes, comments, and even frequent shares. With all that, though, I know my overall impact is diminutive at best. Alas, it is the only means at which I can consistently show my appreciation for the works that you present us. So, in this random chance moment that I feel I have been placed in, I would like to thank you personally for the many happy and literally cherished memories I have that would not have taken place without your influence. Video's you've written have been viewed across the world, but in my little house on my short street, you are known by name and writing talent alone. But we know your name, Kevin, and even though we will never meet, we will remember you.
@ThatWriterKevin
@ThatWriterKevin 11 ай бұрын
@@Unalochy Thank you, that's extremely kind!
@kevindondrea144
@kevindondrea144 11 ай бұрын
Amazing.
@michaelccopelandsr7120
@michaelccopelandsr7120 11 ай бұрын
My idea so I get to name it! Voyager 1 is now in interstellar time or "Mikey's Time." "V-ger's" message has sped up now that it's outside our suns time bubble or, "Terran Time." It will be faster still when "V-ger" sends a message from beyond the Milky Way's time bubble. (That name is still up for grabs.) Then there's Outside the Local Group time bubble, so on and so on until we get to the, "True Interstellar Time Standard." Now that "V-ger" is in interstellar space, it's also in the Milky Way's STANDARD, faster moving, interstellar time or "Mikey's Time." This can be proven by turning off everything except its clock and transmitter. Have "V-ger" read time for as long as possible. They WILL show the flow of time speeds up the further away you get from any celestial bodies. Until you reach the Milky Way's time standard or "Mikey's Time." •Our sun's time bubble: "Terran Time" we know and have measured. •Milky Way's time bubble or "Mikey's Time." The rate/flow of TIME outside any influence but within the Milky Way: We just got there and are still figuring. Wild guess I'd say time will increase in speed, now and until V-ger is outside the Ort cloud .007-.07% faster, maybe. Just for reference. •Local Group's time bubble or the rate/flow of time outside of any influence but within the Local Group: Name still open and unknown. Wild guess .08% to a couple seconds faster, maybe. Used just for reference. •Outside any influence in the, "True Interstellar Time Standard," or...;-P Name NOT up for grabs BUT just begging to be measured. The rate/flow of time is fastest here. (Time flows fastest here so it's best to have your motor boat.) ;-P A minute is a minute in all. It's the rate/flow I'm talking about. The Milky Way's Interstellar Time Standard will be known as, "Mikey's Time." Pass it on, please and thank you
@pauls5745
@pauls5745 11 ай бұрын
interesting theory! MBH's predating the current BigBang cycle, matter all draws together, maybe some black holes lag behind not all drawn in before another BB happens, they get more lifetimes and stars to eat and become massive black holes
@mikeekek
@mikeekek 11 ай бұрын
Everyone should think about this before and after a DMT experience.
@suzyturquoiseblue-
@suzyturquoiseblue- 11 ай бұрын
Earth wasn't made for us, we were made for Earth.
@user-np6gw4qv6o
@user-np6gw4qv6o 9 ай бұрын
As far as the great attractor goes we'll only have to wait 50 or so million years until we're on the other side of the galaxy and we'll get our 1st look. So, hopefully Simon will be ready to give us an update then
@KaptainKBeats
@KaptainKBeats 11 ай бұрын
It’s just so crazy to me that Earth, and all humans will cease to exist at some point in time. Wiping out all the progress we’ve achieved as humans and leaving no trace of our existence.
@jmarth523
@jmarth523 11 ай бұрын
Afaik, the first hypothesis presented is related to Conformal Cyclic Cosmology a hypothesis presented by Roger Penrose. According to Penrose you should he able to see evidence of the "previous universe" through the detection of Hawking points in the CMB. Those points would be afterglow left by the evaporation of said black holes. Nothing he says would indicate the survival of a black hole through the aeon. In fact it would be impossible according to his hypothesis because for CCC to work there must be 0 mass left in the entire universe in order for the rescaling to occur
@philharmer198
@philharmer198 7 ай бұрын
9:59 into the video about different scales behaving differently while may seem " unsatisfactory " is still true . The quantum sub-atomic particles Builds the macro particles such as the periodic table of elements and Galactic cores , and planets and moons etc .
@somejerkbag
@somejerkbag 11 ай бұрын
Sometimes i really need this break from Casual Criminalist to hear some theory of the universe to clense the pallet from all the murder and awfulness.... that I will surely go back to soon....
@ThatWriterKevin
@ThatWriterKevin 11 ай бұрын
Glad I could help!
@chialeux514
@chialeux514 11 ай бұрын
Every single black hole animation on the Internet always shows the accretion disk spinning way, way, WAY too slowly around the event horizon. This is matter spinning at insane speeds, being ripped apart by insane tidal forces, generating X-ray radiation just as it's about to fall inward.
@MaD0MaT
@MaD0MaT 11 ай бұрын
Every time Simon says event horizon I feel an urgent need to watch Event Horizon. In every video he mentions it.
@dianapennepacker6854
@dianapennepacker6854 11 ай бұрын
Too bad that the original movie was burnt and lost. Deemed too intense at test viewing when they showed more of hell. Seriously need to make a remake or sequel with all gloves off. Tie it into 40k too! A nod with a scientist named Geller who survives it and later researched a protective field to travel. Has the potential to be the scariest movie ever IMO. Something about hell being extra dimensional strikes terror into me.
@MaD0MaT
@MaD0MaT 11 ай бұрын
@@dianapennepacker6854 Not in our lives. People became even more sensitive than back when it was released. It would be remade as pg-13 with its balls cut off.
@dianapennepacker6854
@dianapennepacker6854 11 ай бұрын
@@MaD0MaT Hey you never know! Get that funded privately. It is a cult classic! Anderson is down for a sequel. You're right though on how Hollywood is getting even more sensitive. People are more sensitive. We gave those people too much power. They are much louder than us. There will never ever be a movie like Tropic Thunder for instance. That movie was brilliant. Only a fool would get offended by it but here we are.
@bichenxoxo
@bichenxoxo 11 ай бұрын
Just a suggestion - put subs on these vdos coz it's hard to understand without them.
@DeepThought420
@DeepThought420 11 ай бұрын
"How many drugs did you ingest before coming up with this theory?" 😂😂😂 Had me dying
@diGritz1
@diGritz1 10 ай бұрын
It wasn't until Susskind tried explaining the holographic theory using string theory that it piqued my interest. It took me a few years to get my head around it. Now combine that with the fact that it's most certainly incomplete and possibly wrong. You start to understand the daunting task of unification.
@TonyVM775
@TonyVM775 11 ай бұрын
I’ve seen a few white holes in my life. Open to seeing a black hole
@Sm0knn
@Sm0knn 11 ай бұрын
😂
@lynemac2539
@lynemac2539 11 ай бұрын
I love the white hole! It explains so much.
@cheaterman49
@cheaterman49 11 ай бұрын
7:49 Hahaha Sam has serious competition :-D based editors you always have Simon hahaha
@u_t2347
@u_t2347 11 ай бұрын
If the bit of information was written at the Planck length an not something as massive as a atom? The Verse has such an incredible resolution.
@giannidcenzo
@giannidcenzo 11 ай бұрын
Nice
@KhaoticDeterminism
@KhaoticDeterminism 11 ай бұрын
Theory: gravity Fact: mass warps space time and the Earth is spherical because of thermodynamics If y’all really wanna know about black holes, dark matter, and dark energy talk to Erebus. He’s best reached on New Moons 🌑 😊😊😊
@stanislavkostarnov2157
@stanislavkostarnov2157 11 ай бұрын
first read "cosmic mind blenders" which I guess would be more a subject for "Into the Shadows" or "Decoding the Unknown"
@aztlanmerlin
@aztlanmerlin 11 ай бұрын
Thank you for breaking down holographic universe theory like that. That's beautiful shit.
@JjrShabadoo
@JjrShabadoo 11 ай бұрын
These facts are almost as epic as Simon’s beard. That is a glorious mane.
@YoutubeHandlesSuckBalls
@YoutubeHandlesSuckBalls 11 ай бұрын
Black holes are not infinitely dense, in fact the larger they get, the lower their average density. Counterintuitively, if it were possible to create a waterproof shell just outside the event horizon of a supermassive black hole, it would float in water.
@darthvicious9447
@darthvicious9447 10 ай бұрын
If true, can you present your calculations?
@YoutubeHandlesSuckBalls
@YoutubeHandlesSuckBalls 10 ай бұрын
@@darthvicious9447 I can't post any links here to the many explanations of this that are out there, so to point you in the right direction, just google "supermassive black holes would float" Anyway. Anything infinitely dense would have infinite gravity, and this would be infinite at any distance. If you think otherwise, you do not understand infinity. It is more accurate when dealing with real objects of this nature to say that using the standard model, or anything by Einstein, we do not have the mathematics to explain what happens beyond the event horizon of a black hole, because when we plug the numbers into the best equations we have, we get infinities. That is a completely different thing from the reality being an infinitely dense object.
@TheArizonawolf
@TheArizonawolf 6 ай бұрын
12:30 We dont live in a simulation, we live in a hollogram 😂😂
@beerasaurus
@beerasaurus 11 ай бұрын
I like to think the big bang was the most massive of super massive Black holes dying and releasing all the matter it condensed as a white hole into space.
@Foiled_Foliage
@Foiled_Foliage 11 ай бұрын
This is good stuff. from a very avid consumer of the fact boi. this is good stuff.
@georgejones3526
@georgejones3526 11 ай бұрын
I guess I’ve been watching too many videos to be sure, but is this a re-upload or have I just seen all this in other videos?
@hungryformusik
@hungryformusik 11 ай бұрын
That was a roller coaster. As I‘m watching quite a lot of physics and cosmology channels, there were quite a few things that I never heard of, e.g. that the Great Attractor is directly opposite our massive black hole and could be the center of the big crunch, if any. Very interesting. Would this be compatible with the cycling universe (CCC)?
@aaronperelmuter8433
@aaronperelmuter8433 7 ай бұрын
It has absolutely nothing whatsoever to do with CCC, conformal cyclic cosmology, and CCC has absolutely nothing to do with the Big Crunch. The whole point of CCC is that it’s conformal, hence there is no crunch or compression phase, going from one universe/aeon to the next is just a conformal transform, no compactification or crunch necessary. That’s not to say it isn’t a wildly speculative, and wildly lacking in ANY kind of evidence for its existence. If just about anyone other than Penrose had come up with it, I’m pretty sure no one would ever have given it the time of day, it’d be shut down the first time someone read it. Regarding the Great Attractor, it isn’t directly opposite Sag A*, our smbh. It’s completely obscured from view by the main disc and bulge of the milky way, that’s all. Moreover, it too, has absolutely nothing whatsoever to do with anything at all regarding the big crunch. Simon has NO clue what he’s talking about! If the crunch was ever to occur, by definition, just as happens in a bh, everything gets compressed towards a single point, it isn’t possible that any matter of any definition could possibly, somehow, magically miss out on the compression which is affecting literally the ENTIRE UNIVERSE except for some random bits which just happen to hold off the force of the entire universe collapsing in on itself. Like, sure, that sound realistic, right? Like I said, Simon has no idea WTF he’s even talking about. It’s SO far from being even a fringe theory it’s laughable he even mentioned it. Anyway, the Great Attractor has been known about for around 40kph years, I think, and there’s nothing mysterious about it, nothing strange or any kind of unknown physics. A woman almost got a Nobel prize a few years ago for her research into the Great Attractor, and trust me, they do NOT award Nobel prizes for anything remotely up in the air or unproven. That’s exactly why people don’t receive their prizes until 20 or so years after their discovery/work/etc, to be (reasonably) sure that the physics is on solid ground.
@aintitfun404
@aintitfun404 11 ай бұрын
we solved all the problems here in earth and now we are ready to turn our eyes to space. who cares about space. How awesome is that. Even big bang is a theory that never can proved
@MrAlexandermartis
@MrAlexandermartis 11 ай бұрын
Dear Simon, in your first sentence you said that a black hole has infinite density. According to PBS Space Time that's not necessarily true. The black in the center of the Milky Way has the density of liquid water for example.
@danw918
@danw918 11 ай бұрын
When I've had a haircut, shave, wearing my lucky pants and smells, I'm the great attractor!
@xodiaq
@xodiaq 11 ай бұрын
Personally, I think the Fuzzball concept of Black Holes makes more sense. To me, at least. Instead of being a hole at all, it’s a place in spacetime like the holographic universe you explained, the outer area of the sphere is the only part that matters, there is no other side or inside. It’s densely packed quantum foam made of spacetime effectively having its information (e.g; it’s energy) siphoned off back into our universe, which we can see in Hawking Radiation. That’s a massive simplification, but maybe it’s another side project video?
@b0rbifett
@b0rbifett 10 ай бұрын
So much attraction and I can't even get a text back
@adamcummings20
@adamcummings20 11 ай бұрын
I have found yet another Simon Whistler channel, gotta collect them all
@Captain.AmericaV1
@Captain.AmericaV1 11 ай бұрын
Galactus likes Black Holes ⚫️!!
@ThatWriterKevin
@ThatWriterKevin 11 ай бұрын
Galactus just wants to fuck Death
@FatalFist
@FatalFist 11 ай бұрын
The universe boils, in and out of existence. This means the universe is much older than we think. We’re just in an iteration
@delphinazizumbo8674
@delphinazizumbo8674 11 ай бұрын
what if the primordial universe was not a Singularity but billions of black holes in orbits around each other? LOVE THA SHOW!!!
@user-fb1cm6th4s
@user-fb1cm6th4s 11 ай бұрын
white holes exist in the center of a blackholer because angular momentum must be conserved. the white hole behaves through the lens of hawkins radiation. Its only because light cannot be confined to a single vector because the energy state of the universe is atleast currently too dense for quantum fluctuation to not exist.
@robertpotvin8872
@robertpotvin8872 9 сағат бұрын
the density of the black matter near or in the blackhole makes the light slows down like glass does,so entering and exiting at an angle depending of it,s point of entry,,🤔🙃😉,maybe why not😁
@ColeOfCentauri
@ColeOfCentauri 11 ай бұрын
I think Yuki Nagato developed the holographic universe, except I guess she would call everything data instead of information. :P
@MrWillT
@MrWillT 11 ай бұрын
This nerdy throwback reference made me chuckle a bit
@F_L_U_X
@F_L_U_X 11 ай бұрын
If the center of black holes are a singularity where time stops and the big bang was also a singularity where time began...is there another Universe on the other side of black holes? Edit: nvm. You touched on this later in the video.
@u_t2347
@u_t2347 11 ай бұрын
I've often thought about this. There is theoretical "stupendously large black holes" that exceed a trillion solar masses. Perhaps, once they get that big they go bang once again, whether it be in our dimension or another. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ If such a black hole was in another 'verse and it reached our 'verse what would that even look like?
@scottbishop7899
@scottbishop7899 11 ай бұрын
The energy could come back into this universe but in a different space and time altogether, that could be the past or the future as the black hole defies/breaks space and time (ad we know it)
@josephriley4356
@josephriley4356 11 ай бұрын
That's funny, I always do that too.
@Psykout
@Psykout 11 ай бұрын
I've often pondered about this. Given that spacetime is so heavily warped, that other universe would essentially be at the end of our time. If you subscribe to the idea of the big crunch, that universe on the other side of the black hole essentially would contain all the matter of our entire universe. This fits in with the cyclical theories pretty neatly, although it would mean that black holes if ever traversable, would be one way tickets to a new universe paid for by the end of the universe you were leaving. I'd much rather have them be a way to travel between galaxies considering the are the center of them.
@dianapennepacker6854
@dianapennepacker6854 11 ай бұрын
Maybe they are the key to creating energy. I don't buy that energy cannot be created or destroyed and only transformed. That all energy that ever existed is it. Seriously it is depressing if heat death is the end of the universe.
@AbramSF
@AbramSF 11 ай бұрын
New theory. The great attractor is an even bigger black hole.
@neohermitist
@neohermitist 11 ай бұрын
I think you may want to look into "electric universe" and "plasma universe" models.
@douglaidlaw740
@douglaidlaw740 11 ай бұрын
I have had my mind "blown" so often that nowadays, I use it instead.
@arty2k
@arty2k 11 ай бұрын
7:50 LOL
@Abioticwinter
@Abioticwinter 11 ай бұрын
It's funny how a theory is fact with scientists. Their egos can't let it go. They know everything and are always right.
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