The First and Only Photos From Titan, Saturn's Largest Moon - What Did We See? (4K)

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  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 2,3 тыс.

  • @V101SPACE
    @V101SPACE  6 дней назад +1

    🚀🌌 Europa like you’ve NEVER seen it before! Dive into the weird and wonderful mysteries of Jupiter’s icy moon with the closest images ever captured. 🧊👀 Don’t miss this mind-blowing journey-watch now! ruclips.net/video/jMRBNfJwaWY/видео.html 🔭✨ #SpaceExploration #Europa

  • @Martial-Mat
    @Martial-Mat 2 года назад +1179

    Imagine how ecstatic the team must have been as those first mountain images started to come through.

    • @dr4d1s
      @dr4d1s 2 года назад +40

      If you want to see their reactions, NASA has the video uploaded to RUclips.

    • @russell_szabados
      @russell_szabados 2 года назад +46

      My gosh, I was ecstatic enough as a space enthusiast. I can't imagine if I'd spent years of my life actually working on the project.

    • @Martial-Mat
      @Martial-Mat 2 года назад +1

      @@russell_szabados Absolutely.

    • @proapocalypse1448
      @proapocalypse1448 2 года назад +30

      I'm sure a few of them got wet.

    • @Martial-Mat
      @Martial-Mat 2 года назад +2

      @@proapocalypse1448 🤣

  • @ellisonhamilton3322
    @ellisonhamilton3322 2 года назад +525

    I never fail to be amazed by the fact that we can fire probes into space, have them travel many millions of miles for years and arrive at the correct destination and then release landers that survive and gather data. Again, it amazes.
    Thank you. Give Rolo a scratch for me and have a stellar weekend. 🇺🇸❤🇬🇧

    • @MichaelAxelKlose
      @MichaelAxelKlose 2 года назад +8

      It is actually amazing if you think about it.

    • @urbanfashionhouse1
      @urbanfashionhouse1 2 года назад +16

      But our cell phones drop calls at random moments five feet from the house , SMH

    • @leviksd
      @leviksd 2 года назад +16

      @@urbanfashionhouse1 Our phones didn't take a few billion dollars to make

    • @antiquefuturistic
      @antiquefuturistic 2 года назад

      This was also possible 70 years ago, smartass

    • @TacoMonster4eva
      @TacoMonster4eva 2 года назад +9

      Yet we are unable to get the cable and I tercer guys to actually come to their appointment between 1 and 3pm.

  • @markb20
    @markb20 2 года назад +668

    The Cassini mission was such an amazing accomplishment for NASA and the scientific community, and the Huygens drop down to Titan's surface is just mind-blowing. Seventeen years later, it's still so stunning to see this; thank you for providing this wonderful video.

    • @webertbaiao7045
      @webertbaiao7045 2 года назад

      NASA Facts: Secret NASA documents reveal the real shape of the Earth!
      1 - LOCKHEED SR-71 BLACKBIRD: Technical Memorandum 104330: Predicted Performance of a Thrust Enhanced SR-71 Aircraft with an External Payload:
      Page 08: DIGITAL PERFORMANCE SIMULATION DESCRIPTION: The DPS equations of motion use four assumptions that simplify the program while maintaining its fidelity for most maneuvers and applications: point-mass modeling, nonturbulent atmosphere, zero side forces, and a “nonrotating Earth”.
      2 - NASA Reference Publication 1207: Derivation and Definition of a Linear Aircraft Model: 08/1988:
      2.1 Page 02: SUMMARY: This report documents the derivation and definition of a linear aircraft model for a rigid aircraft of constant mass flying over a “fiat and nonrotating Earth”.
      2.2 Page 30: 3 CONCLUDING REMARKS: This report derives and defines a set oflinearized system matrices for a rigid aircraft of constant mass, flying in a stationary atmosphere over a “flat and nonrotating Earth”.
      2.3 Page 102: 16. Abstract: This report documents the derivation and definition of a linear aircraft model for a rigid aircraft of constant mass flying over a “flat and nonrotating Earth”.
      3 - NASA General Equations of Motion for a Damaged Asymmetric Aircraft:
      Page 02: Rigid Body Equations of Motion Referenced to an Arbitrary Fixed Point on the Body There are several approaches that can be used to develop the general equations of motion. The one selected here starts with Newton’s laws applied to a collection of particles defining the rigid body (any number of dynamics or physics books can serve as references, e.g. reference 2). In this paper, the rigid body equations of motion over a “flat non-rotating Earth” are developed that are not necessarily referenced to the body’s center of mass.
      4 - NASA: A METHOD FOR REDUCING THE SENSITIVITY OF OPTIMAL NONLINEAR SYSTEMS TO PARAMETER UNCERTAINTY: NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION WASHINGTON, D. C. JUNE 1971:
      Page 12: A NUMERICAL EXAMPLE: Problem Statement: The example problem is a fixed-time problem in which it is required to determine the thrust-attitude program of a single-stage rocket vehicle starting from rest and going to specified terminal conditions of altitude and vertical velocity which will maximize the final horizontal velocity. The idealizing assumptions made are the following:
      (1) A point-mass vehicle
      (2) A “flat, nonrotating Earth”
      5 - NASA Technical Paper Nº 2835 1988: User’s Manual for Interactive LINEAR, a FORTRAN Program To Derive Linear Aircraft Models.
      5.1 Page 01: SUMMARY: The nonlinear equations of motion used are six-degree-of-freedom equations with stationary atmosphere and “flat and nonrotating Earth” assumptions.
      5.2 Page 126: 6. Abstract: The nonlinear equations of motion used are six-degree-of-freedom equations sith stationary atmosphere and “flat and nonrotating Earth” assumptions.

    • @philipschoen3857
      @philipschoen3857 2 года назад +7

      Let's go to eropa not titan. Why the heck titan, waters on eropa

    • @charlesbromberick4247
      @charlesbromberick4247 2 года назад +13

      I worked on Cassini at JPL.

    • @frankpienkosky5688
      @frankpienkosky5688 2 года назад +5

      @@philipschoen3857 lots of water in the solar system....most of it frozen.....

    • @jacklingham6069
      @jacklingham6069 Год назад +9

      @@philipschoen3857 titan is sooo much bigger plus we cant see into titan whereas on eropa you can see the surface, also we now know that titan has liquid on its surface unlike many other planets and moons

  • @delavalmilker
    @delavalmilker Год назад +264

    I've always been extremely interested in planetary science and the space program. I'm old enough to remember the first Gemini launches---watching them on a 13 inch black and white TV. I'll be 79 in 2034. And nothing would mean more to me than the chance to see the first images of Titan from Dragonfly. I hope I make it that long!
    When I was born, the first Earth satellite had yet to be launched. Now I'm looking at seeing images from a drone flying over the surface of Titan. All that in one lifetime. Sometimes it blows my mind to think about it.

    • @rainbowseeker5930
      @rainbowseeker5930 Год назад +35

      You will...I'm 80 and doing amazingly fine.

    • @kzero9714
      @kzero9714 Год назад +26

      Good luck to both of you.
      I'm as enthusiastic as you both. I'm 39.

    • @drumrocka
      @drumrocka Год назад +16

      The technological progression over the last 100 years is truly phenomenal, especially over the last 40 years. It blows my mind how fast things have progressed, and makes me excited and nervous for the future!

    • @donaldcarpenter5328
      @donaldcarpenter5328 9 месяцев назад +2

      I have sat IN a Gemini capsule at the Pacific Science Center @ the Seattle Center!!!

    • @mogznwaz
      @mogznwaz 9 месяцев назад +1

  • @zombie_snax
    @zombie_snax Год назад +72

    This is a really big deal. I'm happy that people are still out there having amazing adventures. The amount of effort that went into this is difficult to image. Bravo to everyone involved.

  • @BubbaGubban
    @BubbaGubban Год назад +443

    “Get outside, get into nature, and make your own discoveries” 🙂

    • @JoeSmith-hv7oe
      @JoeSmith-hv7oe Год назад +86

      People also think the Earth is flat...some people can't comprehend beyond their hand in front of their face

    • @Derflingerblade
      @Derflingerblade Год назад +8

      @prestallar4339 I dont realy care but why is the resolution like from a nokia from 1989 ?
      If they had 300+ of Images do they have at least one in HD ? I am confident that the data from the space programs is true , but I dont understand why for the public the images of Mars or other planets are so shitty. Cant see ANYTHING on those

    • @matthewlillistone5943
      @matthewlillistone5943 Год назад +10

      Money for nothing and your clicks for free

    • @rickdagrexican7351
      @rickdagrexican7351 Год назад +5

      ​@prestallar4339 Well, I didn't know about how Cassini spun. It's an interesting fact to learn about the process of how the video was created. Huygens spin reduced clarity. If it hadn't spun, imagine how clear it could have been.

    • @Joe-lb8qn
      @Joe-lb8qn Год назад +24

      @@Derflingerbladewut? are you kidding me? Have you not seen the incredibly detailed hi res pics of mars? Right down to dust particles around the drill bits as the robot drills into rocks to take samples?

  • @timwhite5562
    @timwhite5562 2 года назад +62

    Why have I never seen these? I remember the first time I saw images of the surface of Venus. I stared at it for and an hour and a half, the whole time with a feeling of existential loneliness and doom. I imagine standing there, knowing that no one else ever had or likely would. The awareness that no matter how far I travel, I'll never find a single sign of life.

  • @cjsm1006
    @cjsm1006 Год назад +98

    That the Huygens probe worked so well in such a harsh environment is a tribute to the scientists of the ESA.

  • @adventurefighter7501
    @adventurefighter7501 Год назад +25

    I like how it has sand made from fine ice. It’s truly amazing how planets/moons can make out materials and elements nowhere to be seen on earth.

  • @jjmah7
    @jjmah7 Год назад +52

    Imagine seeing Saturn on the daytime and nighttime sky from Titan 🤯

    • @michaelbruns449
      @michaelbruns449 Год назад +10

      Wow, totally mind blowing, the massive rings of saturn rising and setting, slowly traversing across the sky.

    • @rais1953
      @rais1953 Год назад

      It's probably not visible through the smog in the daylight but might be visible at night. Remember that Titan is tidally locked to Saturn so only the side permanently facing the planet could see it and seen from there it never moves in the sky. But the moon goes through day and night cycles as does our Moon by orbiting around its planet.

    • @aspenrebel
      @aspenrebel 7 месяцев назад +4

      I want to honeymoon on Titan.

    • @aspenrebel
      @aspenrebel 7 месяцев назад

      Which spacecraft looked back at Earth from deep in space? Was it New Horizons at Pluto?

    • @peteb901
      @peteb901 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@aspenrebel Voyager 1 took the "Pale Blue Dot" photo in 1990. Earth was imaged 3 times (along with the Moon in a transit across the Sun) by Cassini.

  • @adammorris3082
    @adammorris3082 2 года назад +98

    Wow - It really doesn't seem like 17 years since Huygens probe touchdown, The pics were and still are amazing to see.

  • @tjsogmc
    @tjsogmc 2 года назад +1759

    It never ceases to amaze me that we can send probes to other worlds and return 4k images, but a bank security camera on Earth only captures a fuzzy blur....

    • @avo616
      @avo616 2 года назад +352

      Security cameras don’t have millions of hours and dollars invested in them

    • @hulahula6182
      @hulahula6182 2 года назад +150

      Or pentagon VIDEO cameras taking only 1 frame per second

    • @tjsogmc
      @tjsogmc 2 года назад +68

      @@avo616 the hell they don't. It's a big industry with lots of technology.

    • @MicroClases_Ciencia
      @MicroClases_Ciencia 2 года назад +70

      No, they are not 4k, it is enhanced. Many times they are composites

    • @badweetabix
      @badweetabix 2 года назад +52

      @@tjsogmc You are still missing the point. It is big industry with huge profit margins that are the result of selling and using cheap low quality cams while charging their customers through the nose. Big does not mean high quality. GM, Ford, and Chrysler are big industry, but are you seriously going to argue they make high quality cars?

  • @Дмитрий_1981
    @Дмитрий_1981 2 года назад +100

    Stunning shots ... From my youth I remember how they were printed in newspapers. It's hard to imagine anything more amazing... This Cassini mission is an example of the fact that Science is the most invaluable experience available to man.

    • @markb20
      @markb20 2 года назад +2

      Well said

    • @AFMMD-q8
      @AFMMD-q8 2 года назад +5

      Well said, now please let’s us tell that to the believers and religious…they won’t accept reality.
      Science is reality and facts at its best.

    • @darylfoster7944
      @darylfoster7944 2 года назад +4

      What about sex?

    • @jimfisk4474
      @jimfisk4474 2 года назад +2

      There's much more beyond science!

    • @AFMMD-q8
      @AFMMD-q8 2 года назад +1

      @@darylfoster7944 Sex is always welcome indeed.🍆

  • @brhodes0
    @brhodes0 Год назад +6

    Possibly the only time I will ever hear the word ‘atmosphere’ pronounced as three separate words. Well done!

  • @JRFrancisco20088
    @JRFrancisco20088 7 месяцев назад +11

    All these images always make me grateful to live on a habitable planet with air and water. The odds of that are astounding. Think about it.

    • @SonOfTheDawn515
      @SonOfTheDawn515 6 месяцев назад +2

      I think it would be better if we vertebrates were never born. All the suffering we go through as sentient creatures could have been prevented if Earth never formed the way it did.

    • @Coolrockndad
      @Coolrockndad 3 месяца назад

      @@SonOfTheDawn515 How about no religion?

    • @mtamech535
      @mtamech535 3 месяца назад

      @@Coolrockndad Yeah, having no consequences for your unseen actions would be a much better world. Totally agree. We'd be better off if we lived like animals with no fear of a higher plane. 👏

  • @jimm8246
    @jimm8246 2 года назад +36

    The teams behind these expeditions are absolutely phenomenal. To manage systems to achieve results like this are highly commendable. Great job!

  • @AndersWelander
    @AndersWelander 2 года назад +14

    All these missions to other places in the solar system are such wonderful gifts to humanity. I am so happy to know more what Pluto looks like just to name another one.

    • @frankpienkosky5688
      @frankpienkosky5688 2 года назад +1

      the time may come in the distant future when cruise ships will transport people to these places.....

  • @littlemouse7066
    @littlemouse7066 2 года назад +24

    sitting at home and watching the surface of another planet is mindblowing. the images of Mars are even more impressive.

    • @c.b.e.8555
      @c.b.e.8555 Год назад +1

      I know. Wonder how much it cost to produce the footage in Hollywood

  • @janichmondieu6505
    @janichmondieu6505 5 месяцев назад +5

    Truly amazing. For a species to accomplish this amount of exploration and still lack enough understanding to avoid constant warfare is troublesome.

    • @mikedubbz479
      @mikedubbz479 3 месяца назад

      Unfortunately war brings money... And people will never stop worshipping that green god.

    • @Coolrockndad
      @Coolrockndad 3 месяца назад

      @@mikedubbz479 More like worshipping period.

    • @kdc-nb5fw
      @kdc-nb5fw День назад

      Greed will destroy humanity.

  • @subrotomitra
    @subrotomitra Год назад +4

    Outstanding presentation ! Thank you

  • @craigthacker
    @craigthacker 2 года назад +48

    I'm not sure of how enhanced the footage is, but I'm surprised by how well-lit the moon is considering how far from the sun it is and how thick the haze/clouds are.

    • @hulitonuras4177
      @hulitonuras4177 2 года назад +20

      Think of it like this. When you look into the night's sky, on a good night you can easily see Saturn with the naked eye. Somehow light is travelling all the way there and then is being reflected all the way back to earth. Even from earth its pretty bright so how much brighter if you were standing on the surface? The same applies to titan. All that light bounces off the relatively light colored atmosphere and environment. It certainly is strange I agree and as you get to a dwarf planet like pluto you would certainly become confused looking around for the source of why the surface is dimly lit only to realize that one of the more brighter star like objects in the night's sky is actually the sun illuminating the surface of your distant dwarf planet.

    • @kikidevine694
      @kikidevine694 2 года назад +7

      Ice reflects light really well. Pure , clear water even better. I was taking a used milk bottle made from cloudy plastic out to the recycling last night and there was enough ambient light to literally illuminate it and turn it into a light. If that can happen with a small hollow translucent item, imagine what a planet covered in ice could reflect

    • @XtreeM_FaiL
      @XtreeM_FaiL 2 года назад +6

      @@hulitonuras4177 Between Earth and Saturn there are whole lot of nothing.

    • @Henning_Rech
      @Henning_Rech 2 года назад +10

      It is more computer graphics simulation than the real pixels transmitted from ESA's Huygens probe. I still remember when I saw them the next morning after the landing. BTW it was all grayscale, the colours are invented.

    • @DaveTexas
      @DaveTexas Год назад +8

      Only the very last image of the fuzzy-looking landscape is an actual photo. Everything else is an animation based on the still images that were captured on the descent. That’s why it looks like video game graphics from 20 years ago.

  • @scottpitner4298
    @scottpitner4298 2 года назад +38

    This feat is one of the most mind blowing things we’ve done..
    Those photos of it landing show a landscape so foreign it’s astonishing!!
    I can’t believe there’s so many planetary and moon bodies out there. Even just in our galaxy!

    • @webertbaiao7045
      @webertbaiao7045 2 года назад

      NASA Facts: Secret NASA documents reveal the real shape of the Earth!
      1 - LOCKHEED SR-71 BLACKBIRD: Technical Memorandum 104330: Predicted Performance of a Thrust Enhanced SR-71 Aircraft with an External Payload:
      Page 08: DIGITAL PERFORMANCE SIMULATION DESCRIPTION: The DPS equations of motion use four assumptions that simplify the program while maintaining its fidelity for most maneuvers and applications: point-mass modeling, nonturbulent atmosphere, zero side forces, and a “nonrotating Earth”.
      2 - NASA Reference Publication 1207: Derivation and Definition of a Linear Aircraft Model: 08/1988:
      2.1 Page 02: SUMMARY: This report documents the derivation and definition of a linear aircraft model for a rigid aircraft of constant mass flying over a “fiat and nonrotating Earth”.
      2.2 Page 30: 3 CONCLUDING REMARKS: This report derives and defines a set oflinearized system matrices for a rigid aircraft of constant mass, flying in a stationary atmosphere over a “flat and nonrotating Earth”.
      2.3 Page 102: 16. Abstract: This report documents the derivation and definition of a linear aircraft model for a rigid aircraft of constant mass flying over a “flat and nonrotating Earth”.
      3 - NASA General Equations of Motion for a Damaged Asymmetric Aircraft:
      Page 02: Rigid Body Equations of Motion Referenced to an Arbitrary Fixed Point on the Body There are several approaches that can be used to develop the general equations of motion. The one selected here starts with Newton’s laws applied to a collection of particles defining the rigid body (any number of dynamics or physics books can serve as references, e.g. reference 2). In this paper, the rigid body equations of motion over a “flat non-rotating Earth” are developed that are not necessarily referenced to the body’s center of mass.
      4 - NASA: A METHOD FOR REDUCING THE SENSITIVITY OF OPTIMAL NONLINEAR SYSTEMS TO PARAMETER UNCERTAINTY: NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION WASHINGTON, D. C. JUNE 1971:
      Page 12: A NUMERICAL EXAMPLE: Problem Statement: The example problem is a fixed-time problem in which it is required to determine the thrust-attitude program of a single-stage rocket vehicle starting from rest and going to specified terminal conditions of altitude and vertical velocity which will maximize the final horizontal velocity. The idealizing assumptions made are the following:
      (1) A point-mass vehicle
      (2) A “flat, nonrotating Earth”
      5 - NASA Technical Paper Nº 2835 1988: User’s Manual for Interactive LINEAR, a FORTRAN Program To Derive Linear Aircraft Models.
      5.1 Page 01: SUMMARY: The nonlinear equations of motion used are six-degree-of-freedom equations with stationary atmosphere and “flat and nonrotating Earth” assumptions.
      5.2 Page 126: 6. Abstract: The nonlinear equations of motion used are six-degree-of-freedom equations sith stationary atmosphere and “flat and nonrotating Earth” assumptions.

    • @rainbowseeker5930
      @rainbowseeker5930 2 года назад +6

      You probably meant "just in our Solar System",,,,,

    • @youtubeSuckssNow
      @youtubeSuckssNow Год назад +3

      We currently have a craft returning to earth after collecting a sample of material from an asteroid which is fascinating.

    • @NakAnderso
      @NakAnderso 3 месяца назад

      @@rainbowseeker5930I was gonna say there’s gotta be a disgusting amount of planets, dwarf planets, moons, and other terrestrial bodies in our solar system alone. Let alone the Milky Way. It’s also what makes the idea of the Andromeda all kinds of different emotions.

  • @paulcateiii
    @paulcateiii 2 года назад +55

    V101 never disappoints - thanks for all the great videos thru the years

  • @matthewbryant958
    @matthewbryant958 Год назад +57

    Imagine how scary it would be to enter another planet, moon going through the clouds and not having any idea what’s below. That would be possibly the most terrifying thing anyone or anything could do

    • @LLH7202
      @LLH7202 Год назад +7

      Kind of like me when I did my first instrument approach by myself.

    • @SnowWhite-hr4ho
      @SnowWhite-hr4ho Год назад +3

      It's unmanned

    • @jackesioto
      @jackesioto Год назад +4

      That's why the first craft descending and landing is a relatively simple probe. Once you know vaguely what the surface is like, then rovers or similar mobile robots can be deployed, and maybe eventually a crewed mission or two. No doubt if and when we get fast enough propulsion to make crewed missions to the outer solar system possible, Titan is likely to be one of the first places people visit beyond the asteroid belt.

    • @rais1953
      @rais1953 Год назад +5

      The Soviet landers did that on Venus and surprisingly a couple of them lasted as long as Huygens while returning pictures and data.

    • @tnnetnattninuttn4627
      @tnnetnattninuttn4627 Год назад +1

      Yea. just imagine crashing into alien's kindergarten. That would make them so angry.

  • @timsimpson9367
    @timsimpson9367 Год назад +4

    Just to see the photo's is amazing. All them millions of miles away is fantastic, Thank you.

  • @slaughterhouse5585
    @slaughterhouse5585 2 года назад +46

    Absolutely mind blowing accomplishment. 😳 Congratulations to all those involved in this mission. 👍🏻

    • @1DTL
      @1DTL Год назад

      The only thing mind blowing is just how many people think this is real... Congratulations to NASA for creating the biggest lie ever to exist.

  • @theobserver9131
    @theobserver9131 2 года назад +45

    Accomplishments like this are what redeems humanity. This is the definition of awesome.

    • @billybob-ro6qf
      @billybob-ro6qf 2 года назад +2

      Only ONE thing can redeem mankind & that is JESUS our LORD & SAVIOR! PRAISE GOD OUR REDEEMER LIVES & IS ALWAYS FOR US & WITH US!

    • @theobserver9131
      @theobserver9131 2 года назад

      @@billybob-ro6qf Lol! Yeah, like religion has a great track record for making the world a better place. If you love torture and murder and war.

    • @theobserver9131
      @theobserver9131 2 года назад +7

      @@billybob-ro6qf education, science, and birth control have done much more for humanity than any religion ever has.

    • @theobserver9131
      @theobserver9131 2 года назад +4

      @@billybob-ro6qf if you Christians would follow your prophets advice, and renounce all your possessions, and spend your life serving people and practicing nothing but love and kindness and compassion for all people of all colors and persuasions, I might take you halfway seriously.

    • @billybob-ro6qf
      @billybob-ro6qf 2 года назад +2

      @@theobserver9131 NOTHING to do with "religion" It's all about having a personal relationship with JESUS our Lord & Savior. Those who truly follow Jesus & have Him living in their hearts always do what's right, holy, & righteous. It's when people begin to stray from God that sin enters in & the world becomes a mess full of wickedness.

  • @ponytrekker8996
    @ponytrekker8996 2 года назад +9

    No word’s to describe..what a truly amazing discovery. when Huygens plunged through Titans atmosphere.

  • @VerityMatthewNonis
    @VerityMatthewNonis 7 месяцев назад +1

    Great video .outstanding coverage great sciencetific knowledge.

  • @aparajitadeb9790
    @aparajitadeb9790 Год назад +2

    Very nicely explained each and every thing thankyou 😊

  • @Sly88Frye
    @Sly88Frye 2 года назад +51

    Absolutely incredible to see this. I wasn't even aware of these images. Glad to see them. It's going to be a long wait, but I look forward to when we get more images from Titan in 2034

    • @NakAnderso
      @NakAnderso 3 месяца назад

      We just gotta not die till then

  • @Dark_Richician84
    @Dark_Richician84 2 года назад +15

    Love Titan. I could look at its surface forever.

  • @Peter_1986
    @Peter_1986 2 года назад +15

    Imagine if they ever noticed evidence of life on Titan, and started doing a kind of "live recording" with minimal possible delay where they explored an area that had showed very promising signs of life;
    that would be extremely exciting.

    • @JavaBum
      @JavaBum Год назад +2

      Minimal delay? Are we talking hours here? I think we're nowhere near that just yet.

    • @knightofwind2929
      @knightofwind2929 Год назад

      It wouldn't be released to the public, were as supposed to stay in the dark

  • @oc2phish07
    @oc2phish07 Год назад +3

    Excellent video. Very interesting and enjoyable.

  • @Kanamit.
    @Kanamit. Год назад +4

    I absolutely love these types of videos. Thanks.

  • @_stardust62
    @_stardust62 2 года назад +18

    I've been viewing Saturn every clear night with my telescope and Titan is there as a tan dot circling as always.
    Cool video!

  • @geemanbmw
    @geemanbmw 2 года назад +9

    This channel you have to admit is awesome I just wish you uploaded more videos not shorts but like 10-25 minute videos. Great narrator and excellent content.

  • @methanoid
    @methanoid 2 года назад +11

    Beautiful imagery, well put together in video and atmospheric sounds. Really enjoyed this one. Keep this standard up 😀

  • @alexandertaylor1225
    @alexandertaylor1225 11 месяцев назад +1

    Great video, liked and subscribed thank you.

  • @exclamationpointman3852
    @exclamationpointman3852 Год назад +5

    Whoever does the music set the atmosphere perfect for these videos! The graphics, sound effects, editing, narrations: all top notch. I like that these subject are kept with respect and not flippant. People like me really wonder
    what's out there....

  • @r_thekingslayerx4352
    @r_thekingslayerx4352 2 года назад +4

    Still my #1 channel for space related videos.
    Thx for the amazing content V1. 💯🔥

  • @murielvaillancourt3855
    @murielvaillancourt3855 2 года назад +9

    This video is awesome, like all the wonderful work that you send to us. ❤❤thank you so much, Sir.

  • @1SeanBond
    @1SeanBond 2 года назад +13

    Sure loved seeing Titan! Ever since seeing the movie Creature (1985). Aka The titan find . The video was absolutely amazing! And to think what lakes & seas are made out of ....I believe this prob was one of the best in seeing what it looks like. I'm just blowin away of how clear the footage was after rendering it all ....Thank's for your efforts and quality content...I'm in awe of the content you post & create Ty Luv&Peace Cheers from Sean&family!

  • @Osk.S57
    @Osk.S57 Год назад +22

    It's amazing what human beings can do in the field of science. Also totally incomprehensible what human beings are doing to their own planet, the only place we have to live.

    • @coreenjordaan6294
      @coreenjordaan6294 6 месяцев назад

      Amazing! In SA we dont even have electricity nor clean water!

    • @mtamech535
      @mtamech535 3 месяца назад

      Womp womp

    • @mtamech535
      @mtamech535 3 месяца назад

      @@coreenjordaan6294 Amazing how people can complain about how bad they feel that they're destroying the earth then try to keep societies that don't have the same technology from achieving it. I feel for you my friend.

    • @ronjon7942
      @ronjon7942 2 месяца назад +2

      Like use its resources to try and feed billions, set aside land for national parks, enjoy nature, generally strive to take care of it - at least societies that can afford to? Maybe instead of being down on humanity, you might try saving us your self righteousness and celebrate positivity. Therapy may help identifying your self projection , as it has helped me.

    • @mtamech535
      @mtamech535 2 месяца назад

      @@ronjon7942 🎯

  • @DemoCATicMAN
    @DemoCATicMAN Год назад +6

    I still have that picture of Titan's surface as my wallpaper on my main computer. I still think of it as the most difficult picture that has ever been obtained. I've imagined myself being down on the surface of Titan and having the best view of Saturn if the thick atmosphere ever cleared up for a look, what a view that would be, especially that of the ring system. It would also be very interesting to be on the surface of Saturn's moon Enceladus. Dreaming of one day having a ship that could get there and back inside of a day would be fun.

    • @NakAnderso
      @NakAnderso 3 месяца назад +1

      I’ve always wanted a ship that could cover insane distances so I could pull up on a moon in the Andromeda Galaxy.

    • @DemoCATicMAN
      @DemoCATicMAN 3 месяца назад

      @@NakAnderso I know what you mean, that would be great. I think extragalactic travel would be way too far, even at speeds multiple times that of light. A round trip to the Andromeda Galaxy would take 5 million years, even at the speed of light. There's plenty to see in our own Galaxy I should think, and it would feel just as awesome to go see the supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way Galaxy. What do you think ?

    • @NakAnderso
      @NakAnderso 3 месяца назад

      @@DemoCATicMAN I totally get that intergalactic is impossible. That’s why I want to be the only one to do it.

  • @paulesterline5714
    @paulesterline5714 2 года назад +12

    Amazing! I have seen most of these photos before, but I never get tired of seeing them or learning about the things in outer space. You taught me some things I didn't know! Thank you!

  • @elleni-41
    @elleni-41 2 года назад +13

    Cassini Huygens was my favorite trip to space, titan n saturn..
    Thank u v101 science, my favorite science channel!..👍👍💞💞

  • @Sp_416
    @Sp_416 2 года назад +34

    These images are... out of this world! Great video as always!

    • @taboovsknowledge1603
      @taboovsknowledge1603 2 года назад +1

      Your comedy is... out of this club!
      Do you do prop comedy?

    • @billygribble9939
      @billygribble9939 2 года назад +3

      Except they're of this world... a Hollywood basement.

    • @cerealata9035
      @cerealata9035 2 года назад

      @@billygribble9939
      Nice argument there, dude. Why don't you back it up with a source?

    • @billygribble9939
      @billygribble9939 2 года назад +1

      @@cerealata9035 try reality bud. You're eyes should do most of the work

    • @grant1739
      @grant1739 2 года назад

      This dude probably walks around telling knock knock jokes

  • @charliepearce8767
    @charliepearce8767 Год назад +2

    Good vid.
    Well done to all involved 👏

  • @refurbrob3609
    @refurbrob3609 Год назад +8

    Being part of that mission sending there what us humans have engineered and built, mind blowingly amazing, thank you NASA or the ESA, whichever sent it there, WOW 👌

  • @stuartgray5877
    @stuartgray5877 2 года назад +12

    The instrument that took those images, the "Descent Imaging Spectral Radiometer" (DISR) was the first piece of flight hardware that I ever worked on when I first started at Lockheed Martin in the 1990s.

    • @MsOSheDidIt
      @MsOSheDidIt Год назад

      Great job dude! It worked. Now let's fly into space 🚀

  • @simonmcnicholas
    @simonmcnicholas 2 года назад +24

    Titan never fails to amaze me, absolutely fascinating

    • @frankpienkosky5688
      @frankpienkosky5688 2 года назад +2

      ...even back in the '50's...when we knew from nothing about the place....it was fascinating....it has an atmosphere, and a thick one at that...

  • @darkfox2076
    @darkfox2076 2 года назад +8

    Amazing as always vidi thanks for the really interesting content 👍

  • @comicalgamer6590
    @comicalgamer6590 Год назад +8

    I miss when NASA had these crazy long missions to the outer parts of the solar system

  • @_thespacegazer
    @_thespacegazer 2 года назад +47

    Imagine once they cleared the clouds they saw buildings and civilizations

    • @survivor.99
      @survivor.99 2 года назад +5

      Best imagination

    • @mfazmonty12
      @mfazmonty12 2 года назад +2

      That's likely to be possible.

    • @RavenJCain
      @RavenJCain 2 года назад +3

      @@survivor.99 Sadly much of this stuff is imagination. You have an image or blur, and the rest is all imagination.
      Like this is all ice sand and ice rocks, because plain old rocks are boring.

    • @darylfoster7944
      @darylfoster7944 2 года назад +2

      With the lizards from Aliens running around

    • @tommissouri4871
      @tommissouri4871 2 года назад +8

      I occasionally envision a Mars rover moving forward as a couple of Martians walk along behind trying to figure out what it is and who sent it. Or the one that almost made it to a ridge, only to stop short and not see the city on the other side. I think the movie "My Favorite Martian" started off like that.

  • @hydrostatic8048MGTOW
    @hydrostatic8048MGTOW 2 года назад +22

    Titan is always an interesting moon. Imagine if we swap it for our moon.

    • @Amit_Gupta216
      @Amit_Gupta216 2 года назад +7

      Then it would lose its atmosphere as methane compound breaks in High temperatures and also titan is a frigid moon and it's core has cooled down so no magnetic field means no atmosphere and it will be barren like our moon.

    • @taboovsknowledge1603
      @taboovsknowledge1603 2 года назад +2

      You touch the moon and you'll be the actual face on it!

    • @Drakey_Fenix
      @Drakey_Fenix 2 года назад +10

      Then it would completely change. The much closer distance to the sun would cause the temperature to rise and all the oceans and lakes would dry up.

    • @VG_164
      @VG_164 2 года назад +4

      @@Drakey_Fenix It would have been able to maintain its atmosphere for a few tens of million years, maybe mlre, and have similar temperatures to Earth since the atmosphere would spread out the heat like it does on Earth. But eventually all the atmosphere would have escaped into space as its gravity is not enough to keep it and solar winds would only speed up the process.

    • @louise_rose
      @louise_rose 2 года назад

      "Moons are rising on the planet /where the worst must suffer like the rest" (from the poem in the liner notes to the brilliant Relayer album) ;)

  • @kuyajj68
    @kuyajj68 2 года назад +7

    Can't imagine how much preparation the engineers did for that mission. Smartest of the smart people are in NASA.

    • @darylfoster7944
      @darylfoster7944 2 года назад

      Actually they're probably at SpaceX.

    • @iananderson8498
      @iananderson8498 2 года назад +2

      The Huygens probe was designed and built by the European Space Agency.

    • @Osmone_Everony
      @Osmone_Everony 6 месяцев назад

      If you pay closer attention you can see the ESA logo on the probe! NOT NASA!

  • @shawnmoebius5997
    @shawnmoebius5997 Год назад +14

    I love that line “ice frozen as hard as granite.”So on earth, our granite is frozen as hard as granite.

    • @anjou6497
      @anjou6497 9 месяцев назад

      No, he said frozen as hard as rock. There are many kinds of rock.

  • @MrPetepuma00
    @MrPetepuma00 Год назад +2

    Outstanding! The solar system is part of our home. Time for us to see more of where we live.

  • @mikecarbone828
    @mikecarbone828 2 года назад +7

    It seems like it would be a good idea to plan to have an orbiter equipped with cloud penetrating radar or LIDAR to survey the moon Titan to choose the best places to explore prior to deploying landers or drones, to make the most of such a mission.
    Thank you for posting these videos!
    Please have an excellent and awesome day! ☀️✨

    • @webertbaiao7045
      @webertbaiao7045 2 года назад

      NASA Facts: Secret NASA documents reveal the real shape of the Earth!
      1 - LOCKHEED SR-71 BLACKBIRD: Technical Memorandum 104330: Predicted Performance of a Thrust Enhanced SR-71 Aircraft with an External Payload:
      Page 08: DIGITAL PERFORMANCE SIMULATION DESCRIPTION: The DPS equations of motion use four assumptions that simplify the program while maintaining its fidelity for most maneuvers and applications: point-mass modeling, nonturbulent atmosphere, zero side forces, and a “nonrotating Earth”.
      2 - NASA Reference Publication 1207: Derivation and Definition of a Linear Aircraft Model: 08/1988:
      2.1 Page 02: SUMMARY: This report documents the derivation and definition of a linear aircraft model for a rigid aircraft of constant mass flying over a “fiat and nonrotating Earth”.
      2.2 Page 30: 3 CONCLUDING REMARKS: This report derives and defines a set oflinearized system matrices for a rigid aircraft of constant mass, flying in a stationary atmosphere over a “flat and nonrotating Earth”.
      2.3 Page 102: 16. Abstract: This report documents the derivation and definition of a linear aircraft model for a rigid aircraft of constant mass flying over a “flat and nonrotating Earth”.
      3 - NASA General Equations of Motion for a Damaged Asymmetric Aircraft:
      Page 02: Rigid Body Equations of Motion Referenced to an Arbitrary Fixed Point on the Body There are several approaches that can be used to develop the general equations of motion. The one selected here starts with Newton’s laws applied to a collection of particles defining the rigid body (any number of dynamics or physics books can serve as references, e.g. reference 2). In this paper, the rigid body equations of motion over a “flat non-rotating Earth” are developed that are not necessarily referenced to the body’s center of mass.
      4 - NASA: A METHOD FOR REDUCING THE SENSITIVITY OF OPTIMAL NONLINEAR SYSTEMS TO PARAMETER UNCERTAINTY: NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION WASHINGTON, D. C. JUNE 1971:
      Page 12: A NUMERICAL EXAMPLE: Problem Statement: The example problem is a fixed-time problem in which it is required to determine the thrust-attitude program of a single-stage rocket vehicle starting from rest and going to specified terminal conditions of altitude and vertical velocity which will maximize the final horizontal velocity. The idealizing assumptions made are the following:
      (1) A point-mass vehicle
      (2) A “flat, nonrotating Earth”
      5 - NASA Technical Paper Nº 2835 1988: User’s Manual for Interactive LINEAR, a FORTRAN Program To Derive Linear Aircraft Models.
      5.1 Page 01: SUMMARY: The nonlinear equations of motion used are six-degree-of-freedom equations with stationary atmosphere and “flat and nonrotating Earth” assumptions.
      5.2 Page 126: 6. Abstract: The nonlinear equations of motion used are six-degree-of-freedom equations sith stationary atmosphere and “flat and nonrotating Earth” assumptions.

    • @MomolosZtips
      @MomolosZtips 2 года назад

      @@webertbaiao7045 You can repeat this admission of mental masturbation a dozen times ... nobody is listening.

    • @frankpienkosky5688
      @frankpienkosky5688 2 года назад +1

      ...which is what we've already done with Venus....but it's much further away...

  • @naveenraj2008eee
    @naveenraj2008eee 2 года назад +4

    Hi
    Thats awesome video.
    Thanks.

  • @douglasharbert3340
    @douglasharbert3340 7 месяцев назад +8

    The surface temperature of Titan is -300 degrees Fahrenheit. So no, we will never live there. You could never even step foot outside. Ever.

    • @ConcreteLand
      @ConcreteLand 3 месяца назад

      I disagree. People thought we could never fly or go to the moon, but we did. We will never walk outside in shorts but living there isn’t out of the realm of possibility. Not in our lifetime though.

    • @bugstomper4670
      @bugstomper4670 2 месяца назад

      If your space base even has a minor leak and the outside atmosphere leaks in on a molecular level, everyone will get headaches, considering how toxic Titan's atmosphere is.

    • @catlarry
      @catlarry 2 месяца назад

      Imagine, god made all this possible. God, a Caucasian white man with a beard. He sure did get around.

  • @shanmugambala1883
    @shanmugambala1883 Год назад +1

    Amazing. Thanks for your post.

  • @paulmoss4199
    @paulmoss4199 7 месяцев назад +1

    I seem to remember that soon after it landed you could see the shadow of the parachute drifting across from right to left? I didn't see it in this video, it cut away before it happened.

  • @etherraichu
    @etherraichu 2 года назад +6

    We should do this way more often. there are a lot of places i'd like to see

    • @TucsonDude
      @TucsonDude 2 года назад

      Our changing demographics doesn't care. They're still operating on a survival level and will always vote for sustainance over higher goals.

    • @billybob-ro6qf
      @billybob-ro6qf 2 года назад

      try seeing places here on earth first.I've been in Floirda my whole life & still many place I never seen let alone the entire world!

    • @frankpienkosky5688
      @frankpienkosky5688 2 года назад

      @@billybob-ro6qf ...join the Navy...and see it on the cheap...

    • @billybob-ro6qf
      @billybob-ro6qf 2 года назад +1

      @@frankpienkosky5688 Navy, army or any branch not for me. I'm too old, fat, & lazy for all that LOL. And don't want to get shot at & definitely don't want to work for Biden.

    • @frankpienkosky5688
      @frankpienkosky5688 2 года назад

      @@billybob-ro6qf well, then...you'll have to go the expensive route...as a tourist...but be aware a lot of people travel from a lot of places to be where you are...me included...maybe you could work a house swap deal?

  • @hypnophonz
    @hypnophonz Год назад +3

    Interesting, but it would've been nice to learn about: An estimated gravity ratio and wind current.
    You see, I'm researching places to visit on my next summer vacation and was considering Titan.

    • @birsenva
      @birsenva 28 дней назад

      That would be your coolest Summer ever!

  • @marccracchiolo4935
    @marccracchiolo4935 Год назад +5

    When I first saw the video of a landscape on that moon I was amazed. There are so many questions we need to be asking about Titan. I’m really glad to see we are going back and with a flying drone no less- awesome! I hope it’s nuclear powered and can last for years gathering data for us. Be great if we could send multiple probes to this moon maybe other countries will join in to make it even cheaper?

  • @Peppermint1
    @Peppermint1 10 месяцев назад +1

    I think the desert on Earth are more appealing

  • @heroknaderi
    @heroknaderi Год назад +1

    I lok foward for the dragonfly mossion. keep them coming.

  • @twelved4983
    @twelved4983 2 года назад +11

    It’s a shame the dragonfly missions are so far away. I know it takes very long for such things to take place but I wish it would take like 2 years tops, but instead, we won’t gain any more images from Titan until over 10 years from now.

    • @annoyingspore-ecosolar
      @annoyingspore-ecosolar Год назад +1

      well, it could. it could take a couple hours if one was going a lot closer to "the speed of light", or space/time warping relativistic..something. You can zoom in to Saturn fairly easily with just an 8in. telescope, not sure what that means, but its a hell of a lot closer than pluto. I wonder if something in between, like weeks, or months, is practical (in the future, or with different technology).

  • @JoeDeglman
    @JoeDeglman Год назад +4

    One could almost make the case that Titan's mountains are formed into the Lichtenberg pattern, like most of the Earth's mountains.

  • @kenwiggins2699
    @kenwiggins2699 2 года назад +4

    Awesome job!!!

  • @precbsfender
    @precbsfender Год назад +2

    I can't wait to see the images from Dragonfly, it'll be EPIC..

  • @JOEGAMESLAB
    @JOEGAMESLAB 6 месяцев назад +1

    Only yesterday did i mention Titan, and search engines recommended this one. Great video and details..

  • @wisconsinfarmer4742
    @wisconsinfarmer4742 Год назад +3

    The life forms that thrive at -290F are incredulous that they have been visited by those who thrive at the tremendous temperatures that renders their most common rock, a liquid.

    • @tbpjmr2869
      @tbpjmr2869 5 месяцев назад

      SOLID GOLD, Sir.

  • @mrpogz
    @mrpogz Год назад +8

    Hmmm... Looks like Titan was Earth before the Earth... 👀

    • @christophmessner6450
      @christophmessner6450 10 месяцев назад

      It actually looks different: no volcanoes, no craters, no ancient aliens and all much colder

  • @rudevalve
    @rudevalve 2 года назад +4

    Certified Gold!!!!!

  • @scottscott232
    @scottscott232 Год назад +1

    Wow, what an incredibly informative and exciting video.

  • @larrybaker5316
    @larrybaker5316 Год назад +1

    How amazing to be someone here on Earth looking at "stones" millions of miles away that have never been seen before by anyone in the whole totality of mankind. Simply amazing, and the technology to get it there and signals beamed back to Earth.

  • @박성희-p7z
    @박성희-p7z 2 года назад +5

    Looks like it had a thick atmosphere and the parachute worked well. Maybe the gravity is quite minimal too. Good conditions for the drone to work in the future except for the cold and lack of solar energy. I thought that there may have been a bit more greenhouse effect like on venus but i guess not.

    • @jackesioto
      @jackesioto Год назад

      Indeed, Titan's gravity IS low! Being only 14% as strong as Earth gravity. To put that into perspective, Luna (Earth's moon) has gravity about 16% of Earth gravity. Titan's gravity is weak enough and its atmosphere dense enough, that human powered flight would be possible with just a wingsuit or Leonardo di Vinci style wings.

  • @fubaralakbar6800
    @fubaralakbar6800 2 года назад +9

    From the photos, to me Titan looks more like Mars than Earth.

    • @frankpienkosky5688
      @frankpienkosky5688 2 года назад +1

      ...actual liquid on the surface makes ir appear more earth like...

    • @franciscopagan3255
      @franciscopagan3255 Год назад +1

      Yes. The color of Titan is like Mars.

    • @Osmone_Everony
      @Osmone_Everony 6 месяцев назад

      @fubaralakbar6800 So you really expected an earth like surface? 😆

    • @fubaralakbar6800
      @fubaralakbar6800 6 месяцев назад

      @@Osmone_Everony No, of course not. But I have heard some people say Titan is the most Earth-like body in the solar system. I disagree with that, which is why I made that comment.

  • @darknightofthesoul7628
    @darknightofthesoul7628 2 года назад +4

    Utterly thrilling! To think, humanity could accomplish such wondrous feats...and at the same time, plunge the world we live on into nuclear chaos. The dichotomy makes me yearn for a life on another planet.

    • @tomrogers9467
      @tomrogers9467 Год назад

      And we would take all the same human traits with us and repeat the whole process there as well. In geologic time, humans are just a brief, irritating infestation, like a rodent colony in a house. We’ll be gone soon and the Earth will clean up the mess in a millennium or so. She has plenty of time.

    • @jackesioto
      @jackesioto Год назад

      Within the next few decades that could be possible.

  • @kimbo99
    @kimbo99 Год назад +1

    A remote viewer was tasked with visiting Titan, had no idea where he was, but noted the extreme cold (-200) was told to look inside a cave for minerals was astonished to find two aliens engaged in audible conversation. So we have a lot to learn.

  • @alanbradley1417
    @alanbradley1417 Год назад +1

    For starters, we don't know what color the ground is because the original photos were b/w taken by a FLIR, not a visible camera. Second, we can't confirm the ground temperature because, as with the visible camera, the thermometer broke on entry.

  • @dukevandine5080
    @dukevandine5080 2 года назад +4

    Simply amazing

  • @troytwyman8384
    @troytwyman8384 2 года назад +9

    With the gas planets, can we not just drop a powerful penetrating radar probe to see if there is some sort of surface and map the surface features if they do have a surface? Kind of like what we did with the old Venus and Titan probes?

    • @titan9259
      @titan9259 2 года назад +8

      The problem is that the deep atmosphere absorbs radio waves

    • @taboovsknowledge1603
      @taboovsknowledge1603 2 года назад +1

      Maybe probes that are nano. 100's, each different sensors. A cluster drop deposited in the atmosphere.
      Something like that could be less money and more soon!

    • @wesandell
      @wesandell 2 года назад +12

      The problem is not just the blocking of radio waves, but the pressure and temperature. Before you reach what we believe is the "solid" core of gas giants, the probe would be crushed by the pressure. Even the heavy-duty submarines that can go down to challenger deep would be crushed before reaching halfway to the center. The temperatures would also be hotter than the surface of the sun and would be enough to melt tungsten. Galileo sent a probe into Jupiter and it lasted about an hour and traveled around 100 miles into the planet before it was crushed by the pressures. 100 miles barely scratched the surface. Assuming we could build some hardened probe that could last longer, it would at best last maybe a couple of thousand miles in before being not just crushed, but atomized. Also, even if you could somehow get down farther, you would likely end up in a spot where Hydrogen becomes so dense from the pressure that the probe would become buoyant and would counteract the effects of gravity. And thus, the probe would stop descending and remain floating before it reached the presumed solid core.

    • @taboovsknowledge1603
      @taboovsknowledge1603 2 года назад +1

      @@wesandell I say we look for a moon that serves fruity drinks!

    • @jackesioto
      @jackesioto Год назад

      By the time you reached anything remotely redolent of a ''surface'' of a gas planet, the probe would be cooked by the insanely astronomical temperatures (in the thousands of degrees) and crushed by the immense pressure clocking in at several thousand times the pressure at sea level on Earth.

  • @Dtown1996
    @Dtown1996 2 года назад +8

    What’s the most realistic way for humans to reach other planets without waiting 100000 years?

    • @anakinjovanus1135
      @anakinjovanus1135 2 года назад +4

      if your talking about celestial bodies within our solar system, id say fusion is one of the ways that could boost us forward

    • @Crazy_Gamer_OG
      @Crazy_Gamer_OG 2 года назад +3

      worm holes would be the only way, but that's still science fiction at this point.

    • @anakinjovanus1135
      @anakinjovanus1135 2 года назад +6

      @@Crazy_Gamer_OG yeah I doubt wormholes will ever even be possible to find or create.

    • @Biggvs_dickvs
      @Biggvs_dickvs 2 года назад

      Learn instant transmission.

    • @siddharthgollapudi07
      @siddharthgollapudi07 2 года назад +1

      Visiting Mars is highly realistic. I think it's gonna be done in the next 50-100 years. UAE is planning to build a human colony by 2117. I think it's fair to assume that there will be human exploration teams much before that.

  • @Chief6067
    @Chief6067 6 месяцев назад +1

    I’m not a scientist by any means and my question might seem silly……..
    But is that color shown in the photos (spectacular by the way) the real color or is it computerized color to show more detail?
    This is a great video and going along for the ride down was fascinating and exciting to me, even as a non scientific person
    Thanks for posting

  • @DebraTuchman
    @DebraTuchman 9 месяцев назад +1

    A lot of those rocks look rounded as if there was once a river bed there

  • @padmac8176
    @padmac8176 2 года назад +4

    Very nice indeed! Looking forward to the Dragonfly mission in 2027.

  • @doctormarazanvose4373
    @doctormarazanvose4373 6 месяцев назад +7

    People claim aliens visiting us is impossible. Yet here we are landing probes on other balls of rock. Give it a few hundred years and perhaps we will be the aliens visiting other civilizations.

    • @vladcrow4225
      @vladcrow4225 5 месяцев назад +1

      Well, why they didn't send a cobalt bomb then?

  • @johnran6015
    @johnran6015 6 месяцев назад +3

    Just gonna act like the Soviets didn't land a probe on Venus in the 70s?

  • @TiagrajI
    @TiagrajI Год назад +1

    The Huygens mission was ground breaking. Don't forget however that we had similar missions like venera on other planets

  • @Bodkin_Ye_Pointy
    @Bodkin_Ye_Pointy Год назад +2

    Couple of questions. Why do the scientists think the solid matter that makes up the topography, is frozen water? And why does the flier use high energy motors instead of a balloon / dirigible system where a motor propels it rather than expending energy to lift it?

  • @EarlJohnson-wm4bb
    @EarlJohnson-wm4bb 9 месяцев назад +3

    My wifes moon is like titan with a thick haze around it "esp after eating tacos" and huge craters at the surface. 🤔

  • @pippipster6767
    @pippipster6767 6 месяцев назад +3

    If this is anything like Earth, my name is Elmer Fudd 😂

  • @luthermcgee3767
    @luthermcgee3767 Год назад +6

    It's not only a moon, it's a world.

    • @jackesioto
      @jackesioto Год назад +1

      Well, pretty much all large moons are worlds. Europa, Luna, Ganymede, Titan, etc.

    • @rais1953
      @rais1953 Год назад +1

      Yes. Bigger than the planet Mercury.

  • @burtw.9018
    @burtw.9018 Год назад +1

    That is absolutely amazing!

  • @sailordude2094
    @sailordude2094 3 месяца назад

    Great video and narration, thanks!