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NASA Discovers Mysterious Structure In The Universe - Best Video From Destiny 2021

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NASA Discovers Mysterious Structure In Space - Best Video From Destiny 2021
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We've rounded up the best videos that garnered the most views this year! Thank you for watching! We will continue to delight you with more videos next year. We wish everyone Happy Holidays. With love from all of us at Destiny!
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Пікірлер: 1 900
@BigDaddy-jw9kl
@BigDaddy-jw9kl 2 жыл бұрын
Just wanna give a huge thanks to the camera guy for risking his life and going out to outer space to get these pictures for us
@susanlodges48
@susanlodges48 2 жыл бұрын
Me, too. I wonder where he got his film processed. Is there a Kodak store out there?
@James-wd9ib
@James-wd9ib 2 жыл бұрын
I can't believe the megapixel resolution and superzoom on mobile phones today. Incredible
@mclohan
@mclohan 2 жыл бұрын
Man you guys love your recycled comments.
@jakaiwhitley8771
@jakaiwhitley8771 2 жыл бұрын
Lmfaaooo🤣😂
@BlinkinFirefly
@BlinkinFirefly 2 жыл бұрын
This joke does not get old for me XD
@MTG69
@MTG69 2 жыл бұрын
I feel like I'm going to have some student loan debt after watching this informative, and educational video.
@Dontbotherme11111
@Dontbotherme11111 2 жыл бұрын
Yea bro pretty funny
@T3RD5ify
@T3RD5ify 2 жыл бұрын
That would only be true if 75% of the content are subjects you have no interest in
@rustyfolts3298
@rustyfolts3298 2 жыл бұрын
No worry, your debt will be erased so you'll get your free ride. Someone else will pay.
@MTG69
@MTG69 2 жыл бұрын
@@rustyfolts3298 LMAO Rusty, I was waiting for this comment.
@Cr0nkR
@Cr0nkR 2 жыл бұрын
I finally paid Sally Mae back!
@dlynchious1157
@dlynchious1157 2 жыл бұрын
I appreciate the fact that they mentioned how tomorrow we could find out we were wrong about everything. A lot of presentations are put out as "this is definitely what's going on here" even on theoretical processes.
@msmichelej
@msmichelej 2 жыл бұрын
Exactly!
@Chompchompyerded
@Chompchompyerded 2 жыл бұрын
It is absolutely impossible that everything we know is wrong. It is possible that most of what we know is wrong, but not everything. At the very least, you are self-aware. You know that, because you are capable of thought. Even if everything you think is wrong, the fact that you think at all is indisputable. It is, and Rene DesCartes said, "Cogito, ergo sum." "I think, therefore I am." If everything else is an illusion or an artifact, you can't escape the fact that you exist. If you didn't exist, how are you even able to imagine that you are reading this? If you've ever lost consciousness, you know that self-awareness is transitory. Because you sleep and dream, you know that altered states of consciousness exist. Because you cannot remember anything prior to the first glimmers of awareness after you were born you have a relatively high degree of certainty that there was a time before you became aware. Though it is possible that you are solitary and that everything is an artifact of your awareness, you do say, "we" in your statement above, which means that to some degree you accept the existence of others who also think and are self-aware, and that further, you can communicate with. You could argue that "we" is an artifact or hallucination of your solitary mind but there are other ways to test both for self, and for others. The bottom line which you cannot refute is still that you exist. That remains true even if your body is an illusion. Now, even if everything other than you is an illusion, you must also admit that there is some value in your existing, because if there was not, you'd turn your own lights off. If it wasn't in someway worth living, you'd choose not to live. This proves two things; first of all that you live, and secondly, that you can choose not to live. There a plenty of ways not to live, and people choose to do those things far too often. Basically, any action you can take which will cause you to lose self-awareness will cause you to lose life sooner or later too. Do you see how we are logically extrapolating out? "I think, therefore I am. I became able to think. The complexity of my thinking has changed. I am able to question. I have experienced learning. When I learn, I am finding out things that I didn't know "before". I therefore realize that something existed before I was self-aware. How much of this can I peel away before there is nothing left? At the very least, or at the very most basic level, I am a collection of point disturbances in space." These are all logical conclusions which you can come to, and which are 100% certain. Remove any one of these things, and your ability to understand any of this becomes impossible. They are all self-evident. To conclude, it is impossible that everything is wrong. It is also impossible that everything is right. Beyond that, we have degrees of probability. It is highly improbable that most of what we know is wrong. It is also highly improbable that most of what we know is right. The challenge is to tease out the improbable from the highly probable, and that is precisely what science is about. You can run an experiment infinity minus one times, but that one time short of the infinite is the uncertainty. Thing is, infinity minus one is a vanishingly small number, and therefore, after a point you know that the possibility of being wrong isn't worth messing with. It's small enough that it isn't going to have any effect on the observable universe, and if it does, it's probably game over anyway. Questions? Thoughts?
@dlynchious1157
@dlynchious1157 2 жыл бұрын
@@Chompchompyerded I was speaking on the subject of space. Everything we think we know about space could be wrong. The study of space,although it be called science,is vastly dependent on theory. No other field of study completely changes as often as space science has. They have found out that we were indeed wrong about everything multiple times. With the first person noticing that curving a mirror a bit let's you see further. We used to think the world was flat. Before that,we were even more exotic. Riding on the back of a mythical creature. As far as consciousness goes,that could definitely all be wrong too. Many physics leaders are spending a lot of time on simulation theory. We are on the brink of being able to create self aware robots. Our graphics and editing on videos and videogames will soon be at a point where virtual reality is indistinguishable from reality. We've only been doing this tech thing for about 60 years. Imagine the capabilities of a civilization that's been doing it for 600 or 6,000 or 60,000. Anything inside that civilizations machine would think it was living. We are a very young species in the vastness of time. Having it all wrong is very plausible.
@tobiasgrijsen3943
@tobiasgrijsen3943 2 жыл бұрын
A lot of my friends or family dont comprehend the fact that even scientifically proven stuff can still be disproven 10 years from now.. I always give opium as an example, ohh it was a wonder medicine, worked against headaches, belly aches, back aches, everything! Ohh little did we know its as addictive as it is .. Thats the art of science, remaining open on all these subjects, for it may be near 99% true, there still is a slim chance one of the building block we building on is throwing a full 180
@dlynchious1157
@dlynchious1157 2 жыл бұрын
@@tobiasgrijsen3943 very true.I worked at a utility company treating old poles. If we came across a pole made I believe in the 70 s or 80s we had to drop everything and call the EPA. They treated poles with a chemical that years later ended up being EXTREMELY toxic. Many buildings needed remodeling after we found out how bad asbestos is too. We tend to jump right into things and hope for the best it seems like.
@neotower420
@neotower420 2 жыл бұрын
In college while taking my final science credit I chose astronomy, and the paper was a large task. So naturally the Sagittarius Black hole seemed like a large enough task, so instead of getting overwhelmed I focused on the Jetta of light that escapes from the event horizon. It was all about the experience to me, I delved into a community that researches the consequences of these events, the byproducts, the effect. This is pure science, looking at the effects and figuring out what caused it and what it is. There is definitely something at the center of our galaxy, and in the Sagittarius A galaxy, whatever it is.. we have the radiation, the light, the images to prove it’s there. Only theory can help us figure out what it is. Support the field of academic research.
@herbertpilgrim5219
@herbertpilgrim5219 2 жыл бұрын
Definitely no science into cv19
@neotower420
@neotower420 2 жыл бұрын
@@herbertpilgrim5219 microscopic invaders from another dimension, or an archaic assembly of our own.
@neotower420
@neotower420 2 жыл бұрын
@@herbertpilgrim5219 sure there is, if your a virologist studying vaccines and also happen to work for a certain pharma company then you’re having a good ol Time
@soniadelapaz8351
@soniadelapaz8351 2 жыл бұрын
What's it been now like 40 years ago
@jasoninthehood9726
@jasoninthehood9726 2 жыл бұрын
I’ll support that field of academic research as much as any other. I think right now we’ve had a rude awakening to how poor our humanity’s grasp on virology is. Maybe calling it poor isn’t the right way to articulate it but I’d push for more funding to medicine and disease research at this point. I think it’s a much more safe bet to study, treat, and prevent all the things that can eradicate human lives before we start focusing what goes on beyond our planet. Cure cancer, extend human life, increase the health and quality of human life. Life on a planet billions of years away from us has no benefit CURRENTLY and neither does whatever is happening inside a black hole.
@VRTXEsports
@VRTXEsports 2 жыл бұрын
These longer compilation videos are so good to fall asleep too!
@briamyx8869
@briamyx8869 2 жыл бұрын
Yessss Im just here to fall asleep to it 😌
@biserino
@biserino 2 жыл бұрын
Falling asleep listening to space stuff is nice until you wake up at 3AM seeing the "11 Years of Cassini Saturn photos in 3 hours and 50 minutes" Video... That video is just scary
@hughmongooseisalpha2360
@hughmongooseisalpha2360 2 жыл бұрын
Fax
@Mohawks_and_Tomahawks
@Mohawks_and_Tomahawks 2 жыл бұрын
@slick Rick lol , Power cord ya Amateur.
@bigmiim8584
@bigmiim8584 2 жыл бұрын
Omg like sleeping pills
@somethinghorriblensweet
@somethinghorriblensweet Жыл бұрын
Dont listen to the people who want shorter versions. I like the long videos! I am engrossed in the videos so i watch the whole thing while doing other things or use it to sleep to - i hate my page changing without knowing what’s next- leave it.
@tylermyers200
@tylermyers200 2 жыл бұрын
Blows me away that if we witness Beetlejuice go supernova it'll mean that it actually happened around 750 years ago. Since it's around 750 light years away, that means the light from that star takes 750 years to reach earth. Space and all things universe blow me away.
@limabravo6065
@limabravo6065 2 жыл бұрын
The glowing disc around blackholes isn't hawking radiation, its the accretion disc, and the neutron star hasn't fallen past the event horizon which is the point past which nothing can escape, rather its orbiting the black hole and losing material to the black hole in its orbit
@ashokrayvenn
@ashokrayvenn 2 жыл бұрын
I can't wait for the James Webb Space Telescope to prove the existence of Dark Matter AND Cthulhu!
@feliciaross4803
@feliciaross4803 2 жыл бұрын
I thought cern did that already?
@FallenRingbearer
@FallenRingbearer 2 жыл бұрын
C'thulhu sleeps here, telescopes may find the Others though.
@Mohawks_and_Tomahawks
@Mohawks_and_Tomahawks 2 жыл бұрын
The 'James What" ? I'll believe it when I see it. That thing is becoming a Myth. ... delayed
@martinhorvath4117
@martinhorvath4117 2 жыл бұрын
@@Mohawks_and_Tomahawks Its literally getting shot up tomorrow. You realize it will take half a year for it to get into a stable orbit, as well right? So pictures will only come after still waiting for half a year, not to mention, putting images together will take time as well.
@MusicLovingFool1
@MusicLovingFool1 2 жыл бұрын
Yes, if you believe everything NASA tells you...it will be like a bedtime story. lolol
@soldierd23
@soldierd23 Жыл бұрын
I really like these informational videos. My brain is being filled with high amounts of data.
@uguna100
@uguna100 2 жыл бұрын
When we look at these videos, we come to know how miniscule our lives are but then we realise our lives are our own. I want to know what is beyond the observable universe, or any multiverse we can imagine. "WHAT IS BEYOND WHAT WE OR ANY HUMAN CAN IMAGINE"
@richwatson8659
@richwatson8659 2 жыл бұрын
By deduction and by definition of your own terms... Nothing.
@arvindk2311
@arvindk2311 Жыл бұрын
Unfortunately we all will never be able to know completely about universe at all. I think maximum we can know about it is just 6 or 7% of it.
@morganmoallemian1418
@morganmoallemian1418 2 жыл бұрын
Dude, double Falcon first stage rockets coming in for a perfect landing is the coolest thing I've ever seen.
@n0xxm3rcyxx
@n0xxm3rcyxx 2 жыл бұрын
another video to watch at 1am when i cant sleep. ill save it for later. :) Ahh yes, 1:18am. Time to watch.👌
@pathfinder5217
@pathfinder5217 2 жыл бұрын
6:14 this is amazing science
@authentictaco8166
@authentictaco8166 2 жыл бұрын
I really like this. Though due to its length, I’d recommend chapters possibly for people to look for parts they like. I enjoy all of it. But many wouldn’t spend as much time without knowing what’s on the menu next :)
@user-sm8by9wj2n
@user-sm8by9wj2n 2 жыл бұрын
Nature is the ultimate trip. Mind blowing!
@rottenapple_
@rottenapple_ 2 жыл бұрын
Amazing! 🌌 These videos help take the edge off of the crippling depression and agonizing daily isolation 🤗 🌞
@tommystone3331
@tommystone3331 2 жыл бұрын
Dirt and Jar of Flies #1
@jack-o8147
@jack-o8147 2 жыл бұрын
I feel you my man
@mrmagoo.3678
@mrmagoo.3678 2 жыл бұрын
@@tommystone3331 Alice in Chains?
@djimma5080
@djimma5080 2 жыл бұрын
You need some psychedelics dude they will help with that
@chrisdaldy-rowe4978
@chrisdaldy-rowe4978 2 жыл бұрын
@@djimma5080 DMT maybe lol
@royalredbird9717
@royalredbird9717 2 жыл бұрын
Man!! This was like an awesome movie
@GatherAroundThanks
@GatherAroundThanks Жыл бұрын
Every second of this video is extremely entertaining, well done
@soulitaphimsypasom520
@soulitaphimsypasom520 Жыл бұрын
Love watching this interesting and amazing universe documentary so very much! Great work
@cordatusscire344
@cordatusscire344 2 жыл бұрын
Attention: at 1:50 you describe the "ring of fire at the edge" as "Hawking Radiation". That is not accurate. Hawking Radiation is when a pair of virtual particles form out of the quantum foam, and one falls into the event horizon and the other half becomes a "real" particle radiating away from the horizon.
@danielotto1027
@danielotto1027 2 жыл бұрын
Also wrong^^ That is what physicists tell people so they understand it better, because missing wavelengths and modes in the quantum field due to the black hole get's to complicated to explain. But yeah, the Temperature of the hawking radiation of a small black hole (30 solar masses) is just 2*10^-9 K, and gets smaler the bigger the black hole becomes, so yeah, you are right in that he is wrong^^
@AlokKumar-tk1ty
@AlokKumar-tk1ty 2 жыл бұрын
@@danielotto1027 😂
@JEPATTERSON07
@JEPATTERSON07 2 жыл бұрын
@Amc547 Warlord potentiality
@JuBerryLive
@JuBerryLive 2 жыл бұрын
@@danielotto1027 Exactly. The wavelenght of the photons emited by the hawking radiation is as large as the black hole itself. And I think what we perceive is different because of relativity and the curvature of spacetime. Like it becomes a photon only at an infinite distance. Something like that lol. But I may be completely wrong lol.
@chrisdaldy-rowe4978
@chrisdaldy-rowe4978 2 жыл бұрын
@Lee Sylvester i never knew that was issacs middle name mon : ))
@Ara_Arasaka
@Ara_Arasaka 2 жыл бұрын
I’m here from the future to confirm that the black hole in the middle of the galaxy is indeed a black hole.
@sagebiddi
@sagebiddi 2 жыл бұрын
Well that's convenient! More importantly where's my damn sports almanac man
@stephansliger6387
@stephansliger6387 2 жыл бұрын
Wow! Incredible. It took me about 20 minutes into this video before I took a second look at the D logo in the channel picture and the name before I realized that isn’t a Discovery channel 😂 I mean the quality of information and production and presentation i had only merely glanced at the logo and assumed this was a Discovery channel video but I am impressed great work! 👍🏼
@UndermindedVendetta
@UndermindedVendetta 2 жыл бұрын
That photograph of the supermassive black hole at the center of the milky way is amazing
@ivancarrasquillo4577
@ivancarrasquillo4577 Жыл бұрын
@rtxproductions8747
@rtxproductions8747 2 жыл бұрын
Truly incredible. So interesting to learn about the things of the universe!
@tacojonny
@tacojonny 2 жыл бұрын
Science is a scam
@kevinportillo1971
@kevinportillo1971 2 жыл бұрын
These documentaries are nostalgic, I remember when Discovery Channel used to have good content, now it’s full of reality-TV. Grateful of this channel.
@titolino73
@titolino73 2 жыл бұрын
I hope you are ironic otherwise I would say that science os based under observation, confrontation of results, religions are based on stuff allegedly happened thousands years ago where of course there was no science otherwise those fairy tales would have been all debunked by scientific approaches!!!!
@fjdididiididid1238
@fjdididiididid1238 2 жыл бұрын
Scary
@GetnBrains
@GetnBrains 2 жыл бұрын
everything this dude said is 1000000% speculations and guessing lol they dont even know everything about our oceans yet they can tell u what happens when u go thru a blackhole 1500 light years away lmaoo
@RomeoCODMobile
@RomeoCODMobile 2 жыл бұрын
My knowledge of black holes indicates my brain that we're already stuck in one.
@HB-mn8lh
@HB-mn8lh 2 жыл бұрын
Everything is temporal, whether black or white.
@omega4chimp
@omega4chimp Жыл бұрын
I hope people make it to space instead of having wars on earth.
@omega4chimp
@omega4chimp Жыл бұрын
@@secco1908 Religion make make your rich cause it makes you know somthing.
@semperfideliZamar
@semperfideliZamar 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for making this our family's lullaby playlist❤
@Puertorican-pc5ep
@Puertorican-pc5ep 2 жыл бұрын
I feel joy to know this video is 2 hours long, thank you , because I ❤️ space
@ruthlessjack7367
@ruthlessjack7367 2 жыл бұрын
What if there was Space Doritos 🤯
@HB-mn8lh
@HB-mn8lh 2 жыл бұрын
Regardless of your interest, everything is in the space.
@awfullufwa
@awfullufwa 2 жыл бұрын
38:37 I think there was at least one study that shows the storm is actually getting stronger as it shrinks, like an ice skater pulling his/her arms in during a spin, and is only restructuring itself as a "taller" storm.
@archoftrees
@archoftrees 2 жыл бұрын
Really? We'll test out that fact by putting you right in the middle of it then!
@rybaneightsix5085
@rybaneightsix5085 2 жыл бұрын
Pirouette
@donniebaker5984
@donniebaker5984 2 жыл бұрын
Too bad nobody was paying attention to months ago when our own twin Star that's a brown dwarf with struck by a lightning bolt from our son right here on KZfaq channels when they called it a massive Corona injection from the Sun that was nothing of the kind but a huge bright sharply edged bowl of lightning while there was a Corona injection in the background it was nothing like that lightning bolt that struck Nemesis as it was rounding the sun to go around the back side as I had a calculated yet how many months it's going to take to return past us as of course you'll never find anything on the net about it today and hopefully we're on the opposite side of the sun when it leaves the solar system again as it's cycle is about 3,600 years and since we only got a few bumps and thugs from meteors that were coming in bigger than cars if we're anywhere near the tail of this thing when it goes back out it'll probably be the last time that anyone gets to talk about it as complete civilizations have the have disappeared in the past and I can only be due to nemesis that has a small solar system orbiting it in which one of the plants are called nibiru
@donniebaker5984
@donniebaker5984 2 жыл бұрын
@@archoftrees that's the spirit anyone thinking for themselves or having any new ideas will be stood up against the wall and shot.. Do I make myself clear speaking of which yours is a new idea at dawn you will be blindfolded put up against the wall and face my firing squad up 30 Mac 10s or at your own request we can change those guns to 60 mini uzis your choice both will be 9 mm
@archoftrees
@archoftrees 2 жыл бұрын
@@donniebaker5984 tf are you on about?
@BlinkinFirefly
@BlinkinFirefly 2 жыл бұрын
Laughing hard but trying not to wake my boyfriend. "Stupendously large black holes". We're running out of words to describe the even bigger new objects we keep discovering in space and it amuses me so XD
@MyJagsingh
@MyJagsingh 2 жыл бұрын
Why you laughed at large black holes. Something funny you want to share about them.... please don't make it personal it's just for laugh
@luisostasuc8135
@luisostasuc8135 2 жыл бұрын
@@MyJagsingh they skipped over really big black holes. went from large black hole to supermassive black holes to stupendously large black holes. that's why it's funny imo
@whiteblack8210
@whiteblack8210 2 жыл бұрын
3 years of the video without time stamps. what a bliss. who needs time or sleep
@bennyhill8186
@bennyhill8186 2 жыл бұрын
I don't think that's right. Halking radiation it's not the ring of fire at the edge of the accretion disk or the event horizon, it's the fizzling out of the black hole when it's not eating anything and eventually could sizzle out walking radiation until the black hole for the most part disappeared but from what I understand it has nothing to do with any action incurred while a black hole is feeding
@gene1473
@gene1473 Жыл бұрын
Yessss the comment I was looking for ! I agree !
@t.pazhanisamy862
@t.pazhanisamy862 2 жыл бұрын
Nature is awesome and full of mysterious I love the nature😍😍
@cookmcpherson
@cookmcpherson 2 жыл бұрын
0:23".....I love when "it's not what you think"!
@seeker7158
@seeker7158 2 жыл бұрын
The ring of fire around the black hole is called an accretion disk, It's not hawking radiation. Hawking radiation is very slow and cold process. The smaller black hole is the hotter and faster the hawking radiation will be produced but at this size it's colder than ice.
@jonathanhughes8679
@jonathanhughes8679 2 жыл бұрын
What a black hole does to you depending on its side. Neutron stars are extremely dense, but when a black hole eats it radiates away energy as it slowly evaporated. They are odd things.
@vicegettintoit3872
@vicegettintoit3872 2 жыл бұрын
I feel like we often overlook the magnificence of our reality... how the world works and the whole of it's mysteries yet to be found. Everything is quite dream-like when carefully observed.
@AlokKumar-tk1ty
@AlokKumar-tk1ty 2 жыл бұрын
Exactly....... everything, literally everything including what i am saying,this phone....me,u,.... All may be just...just something else...we are interpreting everything in an illusion... fair probability(quantum world,black holes,our imaginations, definition of all the reality..... suggest that)
@sagittariusa7662
@sagittariusa7662 2 жыл бұрын
The universe is not magnificent, it is ordinary.
@vicegettintoit3872
@vicegettintoit3872 2 жыл бұрын
@@sagittariusa7662 that's your fair opinion although I hope through means of contemplation and meditation one day your perspective changes!
@vicegettintoit3872
@vicegettintoit3872 2 жыл бұрын
@@AlokKumar-tk1ty Exactly! It's all so fascinating
@druid139
@druid139 2 жыл бұрын
@@sagittariusa7662 You're ordinary.
@TheDramacist
@TheDramacist Жыл бұрын
Ive been really poorly lately and these vids were good listening in my feverish state. Ty
@peteranthony6702
@peteranthony6702 2 жыл бұрын
Spell bound ! That guy narrating ! Precise and concise 🧐🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿
@line7596
@line7596 2 жыл бұрын
the universe is so interesting and incredibly scary
@deeman1827
@deeman1827 2 жыл бұрын
Well… just found my knowledge bombs for the silly season!!!Thank you
@KDog2ification
@KDog2ification 2 жыл бұрын
Would love it if this were on spotify or something so I could work and listen. :D
@bobbylewisdevinejr.5827
@bobbylewisdevinejr.5827 2 жыл бұрын
A big thank you to all astronauts and scientist for considering the future survival of all our children
@ivancarrasquillo4577
@ivancarrasquillo4577 Жыл бұрын
@CeciliaMacLean
@CeciliaMacLean 2 жыл бұрын
An awesome Video about our Universes! Truly enjoyed it!
@kirkcavanaugh1493
@kirkcavanaugh1493 2 жыл бұрын
That is unbelievable that we are able to send anything into space that is fast enough to catch that thing even as fast as it is moving.
@sharonbartley808
@sharonbartley808 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you. They think we don't have brains
@thrithgolden2748
@thrithgolden2748 2 жыл бұрын
I love playing make-believe 🙂
@HB-mn8lh
@HB-mn8lh 2 жыл бұрын
They can do it, but they don't want to chase a piece of debris.
@kirkcavanaugh1493
@kirkcavanaugh1493 2 жыл бұрын
@@HB-mn8lh I guess it really would not serve much of a purpose other than to show that they can do it?
@HB-mn8lh
@HB-mn8lh 2 жыл бұрын
Because of in depth information of the entire nature, they think differently and consider almost all aspects before they do.
@EileenPCarryEPC
@EileenPCarryEPC 2 жыл бұрын
Interesting! Great video! Space is great to fall asleep too. 😴 My brain seems to be comforted listening.
@mikehuff9793
@mikehuff9793 2 жыл бұрын
“We expect it to explode. It’s weird if it doesn’t explode, frankly.” It’s good to have goals and expectations 🤷🏻‍♂️🤣
@Reaper81805
@Reaper81805 2 жыл бұрын
Can't wait till they find out there's life out there in my generation before I die, something I'm really curious about
@MbkGaming813
@MbkGaming813 2 жыл бұрын
There is life. 100% I've encountered many different beings and species
@DJayFreeDoo
@DJayFreeDoo 2 жыл бұрын
I'm a bit skeptical about the cloning thing there. that would mean that your body would behave as a single object. but what if your atoms are cloned, you'd just be twice the mass and maybe disfigured. I mean, why would the "cloning" necessarily happen far enough from your body? and considering the space suit as well, having that sort of merged with your body if cloned, maybe the copy would just become a floating ball of fluid. maybe the energy keeping the atoms of your body intact would escape somewhere else and you just get completely dissolved. Gotta question the science right? :P
@howudoin8282
@howudoin8282 2 жыл бұрын
Of course. I always do. I mean, science isn't always correct. Scientists sometimes just give an answer to a question without really knowing, it's just their opinion.
@Quinixs
@Quinixs Жыл бұрын
@@howudoin8282 In case someone stumbles across this comment, i must correct: Science is never wrong, unless there was an error in recording said science. The definition of science is to record things we can observe and measure as fact. In other words, everything we know that "is" we can record and archive as fact. Based on these observations and relations found within and the data collected, we can theorize based on facts. Like how we know that if 0+1 is 1, and 0+3 is 3, then 0+2 must be 2, as it is the average of 1 and 3. People tend to confuse theoretical science a lot with actual science. Theoretical science is, however, only as accurate as the data and laws observed. Thus, the ideas in this video are theoretical, not physically observed. and while parts of it is true, i find this channel rather often to fill in "blanks" with nonscientific science, or fantasy as we should call it.
@JacobSprenger
@JacobSprenger Жыл бұрын
@@Quinixs How about calling it 'speculation'? At least, that gives the ruminations on the possibilities out there the air of being based on _something_. The farther you look into the future and the more gaps there are in our understanding of the universe, the more "This will happen" devolves to "This might happen".
@PlanetXMysteries-pj9nm
@PlanetXMysteries-pj9nm 9 ай бұрын
Science and the universe are something too sublime for me. Thank you for letting ignorant people like me see more of the universe. I really like this channel
@davidberger9488
@davidberger9488 2 жыл бұрын
Correction: The Accretion Disc of a singularity --> is NOT Hawking Radiation (as mentioned ~2 mins into vid.) Hawking radiation is a function of the singularity slowly leaking mass (think: evaporation)
@think2086
@think2086 2 жыл бұрын
The "ring of fire" in Hawking radiation is actually 3D so it's a "shell of fire." It's just nowhere near as intense as animated here. It's faint, but it does in fact "cover" the hole, which is also 3D. The hole (inside the event horizon) does in fact have a temperature, but it is very faint. A corollary to this is that the rate at which black holes evaporate is very very slow such that they will outlive most of the rest of the interesting life of the universe, sucking up almost all of the mass like sea life sucking the flesh off a whale carcass slowly. The lighter "foamier" energy/information is "squeezed" out of the matter, and separated from the mass. It either spins there around the eventt horizon or just beyond it, until it finally makes the leap back onto the other side of the event horizon as radiation, and becomes part of the glow around the 3D shell that covers the 3D hole or else gets shot off in pulsar jets. Meanwhile, the mass falls into the hole and is separated somehow from almost all of the other information. The mass continues to go to the singularity and be stored there mostly for the time being, but also it evaporates off too eventually, being still energy, and even causes jets to shoot out sometimes depending on how stuff is falling in and perturbating the black hole's dynamics. Black holes may be the explanation for a lot more things than we realize. For instance, the universe could be on the rim of a 6D black hole and the spaghettification that happens looks like spatially-uniform (but temporally evolving) 4D expansion to us, in the same way as falling into a 4D black hole looks like 2D expansion to an observer (1 dimension of space [spaghetti] + 1 of time [time dilation]). This could be the explanation for Dark Energy, aka. the expansion of the universe. Our universe has a preference for matter instead of anti-matter which may be due to the fact that the antiparticles which mirrored this universe, were sucked into the 6D black hole while we are in fact the 4D Hawking Radiation. In this view, reality starts off as nothingness, but holes "vacuum away the opposite" to leave something instead of nothing. Holes create reality by separating. This is basically ying/yang in physical form. While ultimately all is one, duality still exists as a hack to get the boring one to behave more interesting. Once you have binary, you have all you need to create all information. This is why particles and antiparticles are so fundamental to the creation/existence of this matter-like stuff we see around us. It's just that the antiparticles would like to rejoin with the particles and cancel back to zen. That's a problem, but black holes suck away this threat, carving out reality temporarily. We are that reality, made of the Hawking Radiation that escaped. The different stages of the Big Bang and continuing expansion of the universe is due to the universe being warped in different stages as it travels in reality to the 6D black hole. In the 4D black hole case, we know those tiny things, if at an off angle to the hole, get stretched out around the horizon, becoming much larger. Our universe would similarly be stretched out by the 6D black hole in various stages. Meanwhile, tiny black holes could be the explanation for Dark Matter, scattered throughout the universe overall uniformly, and mostly too small to interact and join together. Black holes can have charge and spin. And if black holes could be miniaturized enough and sometimes given charges and sometimes spin, they could go on to explain Quantum Mechanics. If the curvature of spacetime itself at small scales is manipulated by tiny black holes which are stable enough to not immediately evaporate to Hawking Radiation, and some of those black holes can charge and spin, then we may be able to explain everything else. That includes gravity at the quantum scale, which obviously would be very weak because tiny black holes without any attractive charge would rarely get close enough to have their curvatures create the sense of attraction. And this matches our reality. Tiny things don't seem to be affected by gravity, but in large clumps start to be. In this view, reality is just a fractal of bubbly spacetime, with the bubbles being black holes on all levels. On some levels, the way these black holes interact geometrically makes for the evolution of "quantum wavefunctions," which is just another way of saying "how the black holes interact witch each other across size levels." Across other size levels, it leads to larger scale spacetime warping (G.R.). On some levels, black holes tend to pop quickly (evaporate fast to Hawking), on others not so much just as when you are watching a stack of bubbles and notice that certain sizes are more stable than others, popping more slowly due to how they interact geometrically in the context of the larger bubble structure they find themselves in. And the Hawking radiation itself is of course just more, smaller bubbles that get shot out as two bigger bubbles merge. Not all of the holes when two bubbles merge go into the newer, bigger hole. Instead, some of them shoot out as a harmonic side effect of the walls of the two larger bubbles joining. And this is Hawking Radiation in the case of what we think of as "black holes," but it's also what creates the different quantum fields, which are different sizes and shapes of holes with different rules to how they interact thus. Some hole sizes and shapes look like photons, while others look like gluons, for instance. This also explains the different generations of particles. You would see harmonic patterns emerge as you scale from the smallest bubbles to the biggest bubbles, in a bubble structure. Certain size levels would mirror each other in some aspects. Some generations of particles are more massive because they are made out of bigger holes. A corollary to this way of thinking is that supermassive black holes are like ginormous mega-particles which are surprisingly stable, yet radioactive, slowly decaying into much much much much smaller holes (again, Hawking Radiation). Meanwhile, stars are like bubble structures that are decaying into smaller bubbles, due to the curvature of spacetime they create. The light and other radiation streaming from stars is ultimately made of smaller holes. Holes give birth to new holes. Imagine, how when bubbles merge and collapse in water, they shoot off those harmonic shells of other sized-holes, and basically, you understand what I mean. When you fall into a black hole and are "cloned," the anti-version of you goes inside, while the other version of you slowly freezes in time and very slow "fries" and "fades" into the ring of radiation that orbits the horizon. Cloning is allowed and natural once you realize reality is made out of ripping nothingness apart into bipolar opposites. Thus, the curvature at the event horizon rips nothingness apart into you and anti-you. The you that existed in the moment before this ripping serves as a template for the next moment, but from moment to moment, you are "different" particles in reality, just influenced by the previous moment causally. In each moment, you are in fact caused by the ripping of nothingness apart into you and anti-you. It's just that usually your anti-self gets sucked away immediately into the tiny-scale black holes that create quantum mechanics, so you never notice them. At a larger black hole, like a cosmic one, the same thing happens, but the antiparticles get sucked into the bigger black hole instead of into the tiny ones that create quantum mechanics. Either way, the anti-version gets shredded at the singularity, and it's merely a matter of scale. The bigger scale allows a "survivor" to pass over the event horizon and enjoy it for a few hours or days before being destroyed, while the tiny scale of the quantum world happens almost immediately--for if it didn't, this universe would be unstable and decay to nothingness instantly. In this view, coherency is created from moment to moment by the clean-up crew of black holes that again, suck away the anti version of reality to carve out reality. I call this the "Black hole Bubble Universe" or "BBU."
@havikparris7675
@havikparris7675 2 жыл бұрын
Cool story. but, when you say "in fact" and have absolutely no way to know or prove that fact. It still makes you look like a idoit. No matter how long your speach is and no matter the truth that is involved in your speech is still dismissed off principle alone...
@juanitacanon3120
@juanitacanon3120 2 жыл бұрын
damnnn that's some trippy theory
@rfry9093
@rfry9093 2 жыл бұрын
Uhh... I think you're completely misusing the term 'Hawking Radiation' - its temperature is inversely proportional to the hole's mass. So with a big black hole, 'Hawking Radiation' won't burn you. The accretion disk will, but they're not the same thing.
@R.DeMora
@R.DeMora 2 жыл бұрын
Scrolled way down for this. A lot of the definitions are misunderstood or outright wrong.
@rfry9093
@rfry9093 2 жыл бұрын
@@R.DeMora Thank you, yeah, I thought that might be the case, but that was the only one I knew for certain.
@beklerken1
@beklerken1 2 жыл бұрын
In terms of the Universe, we seem so insignificant and so tiny, in fact tinier than tiny.
@MustbeTheBassest
@MustbeTheBassest 2 жыл бұрын
"black holes must clone you because we have conflicting theories." That's.... That's not how cloning works. Bob says he saw Sarah at the drive through, but Tom said he saw her at the beach. And because they both must be 100% right, Earth has cloned Sarah. We've solved it!
@zenon5562
@zenon5562 2 жыл бұрын
I like how he tell "scientist" when he don't even know what category do they belong to.
@glynnewton8788
@glynnewton8788 2 жыл бұрын
The G in Magellan is a soft G, not a hard G. Very informative video nonetheless. Thank-you.
@DK-bb1tw
@DK-bb1tw 2 жыл бұрын
This voice is just perfect. Thanks for all your work!!!!
@GeckoHiker
@GeckoHiker 2 жыл бұрын
There is matter, antimatter, dark matter, and doesn't matter. But this channel matters! Very good presentation of celestial phenomenon that are beyond our ken.
@charlesjohns3235
@charlesjohns3235 2 жыл бұрын
En la universidad, mientras tomaba mi crédito final de ciencias, elegí astronomía, y el trabajo fue una tarea grande. Entonces, naturalmente, el agujero negro de Sagitario parecía una tarea lo suficientemente grande, así que en lugar de abrumarme, me concentré en el Jetta de luz que escapa del horizonte de eventos. Para mí, todo se trataba de la experiencia, profundicé en una comunidad que investiga las consecuencias de estos eventos, los subproductos, el efecto. Esto es ciencia pura, observar los efectos y descubrir qué lo causó y qué es.
@ivancarrasquillo4577
@ivancarrasquillo4577 Жыл бұрын
@mtbtravelers9922
@mtbtravelers9922 2 жыл бұрын
Crazy how we know so much about something we don't even know exists.
@brad4231
@brad4231 2 жыл бұрын
Exactly. For entertainment purposes only
@King.Mark.
@King.Mark. 2 жыл бұрын
that's religion for you 😂
@Demogorgon47
@Demogorgon47 2 жыл бұрын
Actually we KNOW they exist. Lols we just can't reach any of them. We've seen images of stars orbiting a singular dense point that emits no light that's pretty much as good as it can get in this current era in human history.
@anteconfig5391
@anteconfig5391 2 жыл бұрын
We used to not know. Now we do
@leewesley9877
@leewesley9877 2 жыл бұрын
@@Demogorgon47 the other side of the milky way it could look totally different
@kudanavadmont1242
@kudanavadmont1242 2 жыл бұрын
"We might find out everything we thought we know is wrong" Perfect scapegoat for all those anti-science big brains out there.
@ragnarvagmoernasson1877
@ragnarvagmoernasson1877 Жыл бұрын
Two burning matches in a plastic bottle!? "Well, THAT was fucing clever," said the fireman to the scientist.
@JeoWilson
@JeoWilson 2 жыл бұрын
The weightless drop effect could counter the spaghettification if you constantly accelerated towards the singularity. The energy required though......
@SubvertTheState
@SubvertTheState 2 жыл бұрын
Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos aren't competing neck and neck space race rivals. Bezos has not put 1 kilogram into orbit, he's selling seats on the best roller coaster ride. Musk has successfully landed boosters that are on their 11th flight, developed that incredible Full Flow Staged combustion cycle Raptor engine which was thought to be impossible 15 years ago. Musk is creating the Internet again for the entire surface of the planet with Starlink. This is awesome since it will now be competition for these local monopoly internet service providers. He's made electric cars cool, renewable energy for single households or the grid. Meanwhile Bezos is paying off politicians and stealing the intellectual property of small businesses.
@tysparks598
@tysparks598 2 жыл бұрын
Word. Musk is productive, & an innovator.
@adamstevens3304
@adamstevens3304 2 жыл бұрын
Similar to the difference between a Republican and a Democrat , Republican creates while a Democrat parasites.....
@KT-pv3kl
@KT-pv3kl 2 жыл бұрын
Star link is vaporware it can't provide global coverage with any usable bandwidth for more than a few thousand users. The sheer amount of satellites needed and the cost of maintaining those thousands of satellites with limited lifespan is not economical even with hundreds of millions of users. The current monopoly of internet local providers will be broken by Chinese 5g providers that are currently pushing heavily into Asian and western countries building 5g towers everywhere. The question will be if that's actually a good thing or just replacing a bad company with a worse one given how China acts on an international scale. As for stealing intellectual property musk does that as well. Ask yourself why he is listed as "founder" on Tesla when he himself hasn't developed any technology used by Tesla while the actual founders were kicked out of the company after musk bought up the majority of their company... His space company is certainly more productive than bezos but that might be because it's propped up by billions of tax dollars from nasa and military contracts.
@briscoerob
@briscoerob 2 жыл бұрын
I have been wondering about the creation of Advance life forms. Awesome video
@elvinjafarli6257
@elvinjafarli6257 2 жыл бұрын
What a video! Bravo for the all hard work!
@marcusrussell8660
@marcusrussell8660 2 жыл бұрын
If we could slow turning our own planet into a septic system, we could live here for several more million years.
@KT-pv3kl
@KT-pv3kl 2 жыл бұрын
We went from stone axes to nuclear fusion bombs in roughly 10k years do you honestly think a bit of warming and some chemical waste will stop humanity from persisting?
@GyaradosFreak
@GyaradosFreak 2 жыл бұрын
I'm super excited of when the time comes humans are able to create a FTL engine(Faster Than Light)✨✨✨
@truecrony
@truecrony 2 жыл бұрын
I'll settle for a FTL radio first :-D
@freetherapy-84
@freetherapy-84 2 жыл бұрын
@@truecrony bwahahahaha
@Brett_S_420
@Brett_S_420 2 жыл бұрын
Not happening. All you need to see to realize we are screwed is the melting of the permafrost. We will not be able to survive on the surface of this planet in two or three more generations.
@enigmag9538
@enigmag9538 2 жыл бұрын
I definitely want to see a video on Ganymede!
@Block-lit
@Block-lit 2 жыл бұрын
Elon Musk: Achievement unlocked! Didn't explode...
@Music_wave-8
@Music_wave-8 2 жыл бұрын
I like your video Because your video are interesting and knowledgeable
@manuelgruber9416
@manuelgruber9416 2 жыл бұрын
Really good video! I'm just confused why it says at 36:15 that the magnatic field of jupiter, stretches out only 600 miles behind the planet. In the next sentence it says it's the biggest in the solar system. I think they actually wanted to say 600 milion miles like they already had done a couple seconds earlier, but just got it wrong once.
@charankol
@charankol 2 жыл бұрын
there is a lot of nonsense in the video
@perpetualbystander4516
@perpetualbystander4516 2 жыл бұрын
No way it stretches out 600 million miles, rather it's 600,000 miles.
@marlenaforbes-reidy9876
@marlenaforbes-reidy9876 2 жыл бұрын
Incredible and beautiful at the same time. Thank you for sharing. 💥🌟💥⚡️💫☄️☀️👍
@Sylentmana
@Sylentmana 2 жыл бұрын
Dying star: collapses in on itself, exploding violently on a titanic scale, obliterating entire planets and solar systems. Humans millions of years later: “twinkle, twinkle little star…
@senatorstevenarmstrong6703
@senatorstevenarmstrong6703 2 жыл бұрын
“How I wonder what you are”
@franklei9348
@franklei9348 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for your great effort for this long and rich information about our universe!
@aurtisanminer2827
@aurtisanminer2827 2 жыл бұрын
This is top-notch entertainment!
@paulocarreirapinto
@paulocarreirapinto 2 жыл бұрын
i thik it´s fair to say we have 2 possibilities. Either the universe is infinite and if you travel far enough you will find even a "you" somewhere out there. It´s infinite and repeatable so, it´s possible. Or if it´s not infinite, you´ll find a barrier. In that case you could be alone eventually.
@ShaggyAbby
@ShaggyAbby 9 ай бұрын
Please another long one soon!!!
@melcampbell8627
@melcampbell8627 2 жыл бұрын
I would love to hear about FM signals in one of Jupiter's moons.
@abrahamvieyra5730
@abrahamvieyra5730 2 жыл бұрын
They're going to find our "big bang" was just a firecracker to more, even "Bigger Big Bangs" beyond our Universe. WELCOME TO THE MULTIVERSE
@avivaromero9301
@avivaromero9301 2 жыл бұрын
“Hungry black hole” I’m bout tired of my husband telling my business Lmaoooooo
@charharn7011
@charharn7011 Жыл бұрын
What really blew my mind is there are some scientist that are claiming we are possibly living inside a black hole which would explain the edge of the universe and other mystery's like dark energy they theorize the big bang as when we entered this black hole that was universally big.
@bladepolisher469
@bladepolisher469 2 жыл бұрын
While being such a captivating subject which is sure to enthrall the masses (1,208,004 viewers) in my humble opinion, making this a two, or three part viewing experience not only makes this a more palatable experience for the un-initiated, but would probably do more in sparking peoples imagination and thus cause them to return for the answers to their personal questions about "the final frontier". With all that to say, the information here is fascinating beyond this simple man's comprehension. Love it ! ! ! !
@dhyanamraval
@dhyanamraval 2 жыл бұрын
This was insane ...😲😲😲😲
@mobidick6064
@mobidick6064 2 жыл бұрын
Like a Beast moving from country to country
@0ptimal
@0ptimal 2 жыл бұрын
This is wayy better than I thought it would be.
@Mindartcreativity
@Mindartcreativity 2 жыл бұрын
42:40 in the old germanic religions Jupiter is represented by the god THOR/DONAR. He is called „Protector of mankind, protector of man and earth against the ice giants.“ The ol Germannic tribes weren‘t that wrong after all by calling Jupiter the protector of Earth. Ice giants could be asteroids and other space stones. Also in other religions Jupiter is represented by a deity that protects Earth.
@muruganuthirapathi2315
@muruganuthirapathi2315 2 жыл бұрын
Can be true
@luisostasuc8135
@luisostasuc8135 2 жыл бұрын
fun coinkidink
@ifhamansari5229
@ifhamansari5229 2 жыл бұрын
Love your voice
@bobkenny3566
@bobkenny3566 2 жыл бұрын
"scratchy sound" is the sand tumbling and falling off around the wheels
@kevinmccluskey2456
@kevinmccluskey2456 Жыл бұрын
Wow, I .enjoyed this so much
@richardbeato9392
@richardbeato9392 2 жыл бұрын
I like how scientists think they know so much about something they have never been remotely close to
@troll2854
@troll2854 2 жыл бұрын
Its not about knowing, it's about discovering
@venerablebastard2064
@venerablebastard2064 2 жыл бұрын
I do find your comment rather amusing but yeah the thing is that they know they might get it wrong. In the case of outer space, I think it is a bit stupid to consider what scientists say as 100% accurate. I often wonder what if the underlying basic knowledge in which--say--quantum theory or astrophysic based upon is actually wrong? Revision, yes? Or just straight up consider the old knowledge as obsolete. It has been done before countless times. I'm sure you are aware of at least one example. But even though they might be wrong, their assumptions or hypothesis are based upon observation and actually making logical explanations. They don't pull it out of their ass, unlike some people. Sure, human might take pride in their collective knowledge but it is undeniable that said knowledge is still limited. How to increase the limit? Observe things, make hypothesis, then do experiment.
@feralmagick7177
@feralmagick7177 2 жыл бұрын
human ego typically, however, I think it's just curiosity and compiling data until 1+1=2
@R.DeMora
@R.DeMora 2 жыл бұрын
@Nad Senoj 👈 That's the merit of science: making predictions and trying to prove them WRONG.
@ricksanchez2323
@ricksanchez2323 2 жыл бұрын
the ring of fire called hawking radiation? lol... no...
@Anguirus2012
@Anguirus2012 2 жыл бұрын
I love this guys voice.
@Taime88
@Taime88 2 жыл бұрын
I can't tell you how much it irks me that people keep saying the laws of physics break down in a black hole. Black holes do not break a single law of physics. They break mathmatical thoughts and equations, but not the laws of physics.
@Taime88
@Taime88 2 жыл бұрын
Math is not built to deal with concepts of either 0 or infinity in a way needed to calculate occurrences inside a black hole. Which to me dosent make sense at all, considering neither 0 not infinity are needed to explain it, especially when you can calculate the mass of the star that creates them, but I digress. Every single LAW of physics, those things that have been proven to be true in EVERY argument, do not break down in a black hole. Einstein's e=mc^2 theory and general relativity are not laws, they are just useful tools for situational analysis of physical motions under certain conditions. And seeing as how the speed of light has been proven to not be constant, given the expansion of the universe, which Einstein himself admitted to having completely overlooked, his equations never worked outside of certain interactions, and under at best lab conditions,namely objects at rest. They aren't laws.
@johnibat
@johnibat 2 жыл бұрын
Last night I had a semi-lucid dream that planet Earth entered another solar system through a portal in the universe. I hadn't watched this content yet talking about wormholes. I've traveled several times through these wormholes, but not with a body in a state of matter, but a spiritual body.
@waynecallister5297
@waynecallister5297 2 жыл бұрын
haha stop taking ascid and get help
@isaacbrown8907
@isaacbrown8907 2 жыл бұрын
What if the big bang was just a super massive black hole forming and everything it sucked in from the other side formed this side and started this universe. That's why it's always expanding. As there seems so be no end to a size of a black hole
@jystme2437
@jystme2437 2 жыл бұрын
I like that
@youngstaboi1474
@youngstaboi1474 2 жыл бұрын
*Harvard has entered the chat*
@bryandouthwright8973
@bryandouthwright8973 2 жыл бұрын
this is a theory already proposed by scientists
@isaacbrown8907
@isaacbrown8907 2 жыл бұрын
@Lee Sylvester that's my name. No really that's my name
@sharonbartley808
@sharonbartley808 2 жыл бұрын
Wonder what started the whole thing 🤔
@melophoga
@melophoga 2 жыл бұрын
In the Middle Ages right before The Renaissance, they would throw stones at you until you die as punishment for saying the Earth was round. Today we're talking about stretching through space into a black hole, thank God all the large stones are gone.
@emoass7853
@emoass7853 Жыл бұрын
Bro I was just tryna sleep but the intro was funny asf💀
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