Journey to the Andromeda Galaxy [4K]

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  • Опубликовано: 28 апр 2024
  • The Andromeda Galaxy is our massive galactic neighbour, a spiral galaxy more than double the size of the Milky Way. In this video, we will be taking a journey, from this galaxy's ancient history, right up to its remote future- using the latest and most beautiful images to know our cosmic neighbour like never before. This is our journey to the Andromeda Galaxy...
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    Do you use these videos to sleep or for night time watching? Check out the new sleeping space playlist, a collection of my most chilled out and ambient videos.
    • Sleeping Space Playlist
    Soundtrack by CO.AG Music: / @co.agmusic
    - Drifting Through Time: • Drifting Through Time ...
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    - Space: • Space - Sci-fi Soundsc...
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    FOOTAGE:
    The space scenes in this video were captured using SpaceEngine Pro, a virtual universe simulator:
    spaceengine.org/
    Get SpaceEngine on Steam: store.steampowered.com/app/31...
    Public domain telescope footage and simulations by NASA and the ESA.
    Multiple stock footage clips were provided by Videezy.com and Pexels.com, two free stock footage websites.
    www.videezy.com
    www.pexels.com
    SOURCES OF INFORMATION:
    - Background Information: earthsky.org/clusters-nebulae...
    - The Great Debate: skyserver.sdss.org/dr16/en/pro...
    - Heber Curtis on Spiral Nebulae: iopscience.iop.org/article/10...
    - Andromeda's Enormous Halo: www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/...
    - Recent Discoveries in Andromeda: www.space.com/15590-andromeda...
    - Stars, Clusters & Clouds in Andromeda: skyandtelescope.org/astronomy...
    (NON-ENGLISH VIEWERS)
    To get subtitles in another language, click the [CC] button in the bottom right corner of the screen, then click the Settings (cogwheel) icon next to it, click "Subtitles / CC" and click "Auto-Translate", and select your language from there.
    Business Enquiries: SEA.Enquiries@gmail.com
    CHAPTERS:
    0:00 Introduction
    1:19 Historical Observations of Andromeda
    5:25 The Great Debate
    8:12 Modern Efforts to Study Andromeda
    9:36 Road to Andromeda
    14:00 Andromeda's Satellites
    17:48 Inside the Andromeda Galaxy
    21:07 Worlds Inside Andromeda
    22:51 Black Holes in Andromeda
    25:00 Andromeda's Blueshift
    27:32 Collision with the Milky Way
    31:07 Milkomeda
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Комментарии • 3,4 тыс.

  • @sea_space
    @sea_space  2 года назад +1381

    FYI I uploaded this last night but the audio at the start was bugged so this is a re-upload with that fixed. Enjoy 😊

    • @moai3951
      @moai3951 2 года назад +8

      Oh, i got confused at first because I saw a notification about new video on your channel yesterday😂
      Keep up the great work

    • @fotisfotis8060
      @fotisfotis8060 2 года назад +8

      Τhanks a lot and keep up the good work

    • @ryanhoward3875
      @ryanhoward3875 2 года назад +6

      Been waiting for the new video! Keep up the good work 👏🏻

    • @TechnikoreHTiD
      @TechnikoreHTiD 2 года назад +2

      I thought I seen you post a video then when I went looking for it it had gone 😂

    • @ornessarhithfaeron3576
      @ornessarhithfaeron3576 2 года назад

      And I was wondering why my unwatched videos list had a private video at the bottom

  • @eliasbergman7961
    @eliasbergman7961 2 года назад +3337

    I can't imagine the absolute awe the astronomer experienced the moment he realized there were other galaxies.

    • @randallacord5087
      @randallacord5087 2 года назад +157

      Yes, I was thinking that myself... it blows my mind EVERY time I think how things are out there. I didn't know till just now that man thought it was just the milky way up until the roaring twenties!!? Makes since if they didn't have the knowledge and equipment though.

    • @arsmariastarlight3567
      @arsmariastarlight3567 2 года назад +131

      The greatest moment in science is when we discover something so significant it fundamentally changed the way how we perceive things and start to stimulate our deep curiosity to start observing and learning new things, forcing us to adapt and understand new things unknown to us

    • @Yusuketh443
      @Yusuketh443 2 года назад +8

      realise*

    • @MountainFisher
      @MountainFisher 2 года назад +77

      I can remember the awe of discovering other galaxies existed, but I was a kid. My grandmother taught us to read starting when we could talk like a 4 year old should. She would spend an hour or so every day teaching us the letters, sounds and we'd get a small chalkboard to print them on.
      A few years later I remember the day I read in our Funk & Wagnalls Encyclopedia about galaxies with a big picture of the Triangulum Galaxy. I didn't understand exactly what some terms or concepts meant, but I understood what galaxies were. I was 8 years old and it was the summer of 1958.
      I went outside that night and looked at the starry sky and thought about it, wishing I had a telescope. I got a decent one for Xmas, a three inch reflector (80mm) and the full Moon was out that night. It came with a star chart (hold over your head) and two lens, one was 22x and the other was 80x. I had no idea what the mm on the 80mm aperture by 400mm focal length meant as I hadn't read anything about metric yet. I'll tell you what, I could see the Andromeda Galaxy when I got away from the city light with that 18mm lens. I have a couple of telescopes now and still look at the stars. One actually not too much bigger than that first one.

    • @13_cmi
      @13_cmi 2 года назад +8

      Pretty sure all the astronomers just argued about it like they always do

  • @alishahrose2076
    @alishahrose2076 2 года назад +1250

    It's mind-boggling that even though the two galaxies contain billions and billions of stars, there's low chances of star collisions during the merger. It makes you put the interstellar distances into perspective.

    • @libraryofthoughts0
      @libraryofthoughts0 2 года назад +44

      Well said. I was thinking that too!
      Greetings from Finland!

    • @davidsheckler8417
      @davidsheckler8417 2 года назад +5

      No...it's mind boggling that you believe this horse shit 🤦‍♂️

    • @alishahrose2076
      @alishahrose2076 2 года назад +57

      @@davidsheckler8417 What do you believe then?

    • @tupaicindjeke275
      @tupaicindjeke275 2 года назад +73

      @@alishahrose2076 Maybe Wizards & witches.

    • @MatthewMorganReddwood
      @MatthewMorganReddwood 2 года назад +78

      @@tupaicindjeke275 probably believes that the Earth is flat too😂

  • @danielzellers4973
    @danielzellers4973 2 года назад +120

    People on planets in The Andromeda Galaxy are probably watching the same kind of videos about the Milky Way galaxy.

    • @skunkface
      @skunkface 2 месяца назад +4

      Maybe using similar technology. God only knows.

    • @harleyhendrix8467
      @harleyhendrix8467 2 месяца назад +1

      Omg...wouldn't that be amazing

    • @JAY2Shiestyyyyy
      @JAY2Shiestyyyyy 2 месяца назад +2

      @@skunkface if there really is something out there in the Andromeda galaxy, i believe they have technology so advanced we couldn't even begin to imagine. It's a much larger galaxy with i believe recourses we couldn't fathom

    • @gegagedigedagedaoh
      @gegagedigedagedaoh Месяц назад +3

      @@JAY2Shiestyyyyyor they could be as smart as a caveman for all we know

    • @andremoreira2674
      @andremoreira2674 Месяц назад +3

      And probably smoking a piece of hemp too...

  • @TJSaw
    @TJSaw 2 года назад +384

    The universe is a truly magical place. Far more beautiful than the human mind can comprehend. Every time I think I about the sheer expanse of creation, I am humbled almost to the point of tears.

    • @rossicourvosi218
      @rossicourvosi218 Год назад +20

      My brain just logs out 😂

    • @tinobemellow
      @tinobemellow Год назад +7

      Either magical or just really big, depending on viewpoint.

    • @Spookatz.
      @Spookatz. Год назад +1

      @@russellpinuela2005 what

    • @aerions
      @aerions Год назад +2

      How I felt looking at all of our galaxy's HII star forming regions across the band of the milky way, with the aid of gen 3 night vision :D I was like "shut the fuck uppp I am not seeing cygnus wall and veil nebula naked eye rn" to my buddy. And he was in awe when he took the monocular. Highly recommend touring the night sky with night vision, some people even run small businesses around night vision tours. Just gotta look around

    • @0Turbox
      @0Turbox Год назад +5

      You got me at "The Universe is..." and lost me at "Magical".

  • @roryedward2631
    @roryedward2631 2 года назад +803

    Imagine being able to look up into the night sky, and seeing a spectacular & breathtakingly beautiful spiral Galaxy across the entire heavens.

    • @harshchauhan1789
      @harshchauhan1789 2 года назад +9

      Vsauce made an entire video about the same

    • @lindajamieson5142
      @lindajamieson5142 2 года назад +7

      The galaxy is scary not beautiful. You have no idea whats out there... mind boggling xxxx

    • @markusallen5634
      @markusallen5634 2 года назад +46

      @@lindajamieson5142 Fear of the unknown shouldn't keep us from wanting to explore the universe, any more than wanting to explore the vast oceans of the earth. It's just sad that for most humans, alien life is either believed to be like E.T. or like the Zenomorphs face huggers from the movie 'Alien'.

    • @lindajamieson5142
      @lindajamieson5142 2 года назад

      @@markusallen5634 l think on this planet only aliens who got lost and get home maybe.? But who cares theres so much to explore. If you choose to go to another so u can be an alien 2? Lets just hope some aliens arent cannibles hey? Thats all. Good luck in finding the star,Heaven named after me. Bet u cant even tell me which universe l think my ansesters came from? xxxx

    • @anotherdamn6c
      @anotherdamn6c 2 года назад +21

      We do. We can. It's ours.

  • @anonymouse7640
    @anonymouse7640 2 года назад +272

    Meanwhile in Andromeda :-
    Journey to the Milky way (4K)

    • @justaman745
      @justaman745 Год назад +3

      Lol

    • @mbwhly
      @mbwhly Год назад +16

      That actually could be true.

    • @users10116
      @users10116 Год назад +5

      @@mbwhly yeah we laugv but it could be true this galaxy is more vast and more older so its entirely possible

    • @joty4145
      @joty4145 Год назад +19

      Yeah there is a guy in Andromenda that has a documentary to Milky Way

    • @nicovlog7607
      @nicovlog7607 Год назад

      @@users10116 and no stranger objects are came on our galaxy to take info on other worlds like we do?..

  • @oldman2800
    @oldman2800 Год назад +13

    Remember the light we can see today from Andromeda is a two and a half million year fossil

    • @MrPhinn1
      @MrPhinn1 Год назад +3

      Scary, isn't it.

    • @Kunfucious577
      @Kunfucious577 Месяц назад

      That blows my mind. The whole time is relative thing is just nuts.

  • @elrondhubbard7059
    @elrondhubbard7059 Год назад +41

    15:54 This photograph blew my mind
    This is a close up picture of a small dwarf galaxy that orbits around the main Andromeda galaxy. Every blip of light is an entire solar system. There's something about this picture that really puts everything in to scale. Just.. wow.

    • @Alarix246
      @Alarix246 9 месяцев назад +2

      The constant dilemma about how can it be dark at night inside such bright Universe? 🤭

    • @francus7227
      @francus7227 29 дней назад +1

      ​@Alarix246
      Light intensity diminishes by a square factor. We're 93 million miles from the sun. One astronomical unit. For every A.U. the brightness only 1/4th, 1/9th, 1/16th, as strong. Jupiter is 6 A.U. from the sun. So light is 1/36th as strong as on Earth. Keep doing that and the universe gets pretty dim. On Pluto the Sun is 1/1,300th as strong as on Earth.

  • @jc_cometh_in_peace7542
    @jc_cometh_in_peace7542 2 года назад +1062

    I wish I could be here in 3 billion years time so I could look up and see Andromeda in all its glory.

    • @fffrrraannkk
      @fffrrraannkk 2 года назад +65

      @@sentientflower7891 I think I may have thrown it out last time I cleaned up. You know how it is.

    • @GenericUsername1388
      @GenericUsername1388 2 года назад +56

      The red giant sun would probably block it out though

    • @rebelman7837
      @rebelman7837 2 года назад +15

      @@GenericUsername1388 not during the night

    • @reptilefisch
      @reptilefisch 2 года назад +75

      Pretty sure the Earth is gone at that point.

    • @tessafox1329
      @tessafox1329 2 года назад +28

      @@reptilefisch If our sun has an estimated 10 billion years left, then we do too. And way before the end we will be all over the.universe. think positive. Lol

  • @seatopiascuba3540
    @seatopiascuba3540 2 года назад +437

    No words can explain how important these videos are to me personally! With sincere gratitude, thank you.

    • @buckwindsor5773
      @buckwindsor5773 2 года назад +2

      It puts a different perspective on things for me, especially with my conflict with the spiritual..May I ask why you find this info important?

    • @mgtowstanleyzoltanov9808
      @mgtowstanleyzoltanov9808 2 года назад

      For me as well this is about my home world

    • @buckwindsor5773
      @buckwindsor5773 2 года назад +7

      @Opptrends the Quran? Is that the book that claims we were created out of a clot of blood, the book that claims Mohammed rode a flying horse to Heaven one night?. Thanks for that….it’s those kinds of stories that reinforce my decision to remain atheist.

    • @mth469
      @mth469 2 года назад +2

      Could you show your appreciation
      by changing your name
      from Benjamin Wood
      to Benjamin Sky
      ?

    • @buckwindsor5773
      @buckwindsor5773 2 года назад +3

      @Opptrends wrong translation huh? We now know huh? It’s up to me huh? I accepted Christianity then after years of study and meditation came to the conclusion that I couldn’t believe it…If I accept Islam, then later find that I don’t believe it, what is the penalty for my disbelief? Hmmm.

  • @Jez2008UK
    @Jez2008UK Год назад +37

    I've always said that when I die the first thing I'm doing is heading straight for Andromeda, and now I don't have to! That was an amazing video and you explained things so well that even I could understand them! Well done and thank you!

    • @willragsdale309
      @willragsdale309 Год назад +2

      I have been thinking the same thing

    • @johnbowkett80
      @johnbowkett80 Год назад +1

      Me too . 👍🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

  • @ahuramazda980
    @ahuramazda980 7 месяцев назад +24

    One of the best space videos ever produced. I appreciate the way you are able to communicate such complex concepts in a palatable form. Thank you!

    • @samturner55
      @samturner55 3 месяца назад

      Maybe we were put here? That’s why we dont get on with any of the species on planet earth?
      What do you think? You can’t believe in god surely ?

  • @someguydan
    @someguydan 2 года назад +290

    I love how Hubble pulls back the curtain after the "The great debate of 1920" and exposes the minds of colleagues to the unimaginable vastness of the universe. Like standing on a cliff edge in the night and arguing it's the edge of the world while he just throws a rock into the darkness and they hear it clatter below minutes later.

  • @avedic
    @avedic 2 года назад +248

    The super high res photos that show SO MANY STARS....is just mesmerizing.
    And to think....each of those teeny tiny dots....are so unbelievably far away from each other.
    The scope and scale of it all is incredible and super inspiring.

    • @zochiang
      @zochiang Год назад +11

      Doesnt inspire me at all, it made me wonder

    • @cloverassassinscreed
      @cloverassassinscreed Год назад

    • @sarojinichaudhury179
      @sarojinichaudhury179 9 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@Hewhoremains420True ; our minds are too limited.

    • @I-am-Veritas
      @I-am-Veritas 8 месяцев назад +2

      And that's just the Andromeda.
      Entire universe is 94billion light years- the largest distance between two galaxies is 47billion.
      Incredible

    • @sarojinichaudhury179
      @sarojinichaudhury179 8 месяцев назад

      @@I-am-Veritas Do not know , how the great astronomers lead a normal life , after knowing the vastness of the visible universe ( not to speak about the invisible parts , because that will make them mad ).. .

  • @whattherichardd
    @whattherichardd Год назад +18

    I appreciate that these videos often have emphasise the fact that we truly are lucky to be living in a time where a) we can learn about the galaxies/space before it all spreads away and b) we live in a time where we are relatively safe from some of the chaos or eventual eternal order of the universe.

  • @TheEnigmaUniverse-vt2pm
    @TheEnigmaUniverse-vt2pm 5 месяцев назад +15

    I recently bought my first house and played all your videos while I painted the rooms and did some minor repair over the course of two months before fully moving in. Your videos are the best and are now forever part of my memory of my new home. I was born and raised in Hawaii but moved away. This video is so fitting for me to finally have made a comment with a Hawaiian name given to the super cluster. Thank you.

    • @missaamane8580
      @missaamane8580 4 месяца назад +2

      Same but i watched while i was hanging up clothing

  • @Kryptic1046
    @Kryptic1046 2 года назад +183

    Immanuel Kant was a boss for figuring out what Andromeda was over 200 years ago. Given the general thinking and the way people viewed the universe at the time , it is mind-blowing that he worked it out so long ago; he was essentially correct.

    • @Broomtwo
      @Broomtwo 2 года назад +5

      He didn't "figure it out" though, it was just a hypothesis.

    • @Kryptic1046
      @Kryptic1046 2 года назад +56

      ​@@Broomtwo - That's how most great ideas begin, and very few things are known with absolute certainty. Stating "It was just a hypothesis" minimizes what a great thinker Kant was. Besides, if you posit something based on what little evidence is available at the time and it later turns out you were correct, then I'm going to give you credit for "figuring it out" even if someone else doesn't like my terminology. Kant was a major catalyst for our current understanding of a universe filled with multiple galaxies, and it was profound for someone in his day to even suggest such a thing at all. That was the point I was making.

    • @uniqueflowsnake
      @uniqueflowsnake 2 года назад +14

      @@Kryptic1046 a more profound realization for me was that Neptune, the planet is over here making youtube comments about Kant over here. Wild.

    • @forthefunofit3230
      @forthefunofit3230 2 года назад

      most of it was THEORY!!!!!!

    • @Heart2HeartBooks
      @Heart2HeartBooks 2 года назад +17

      Imagine where we would be if the catholic church had not stifled so many great scientists with threats of torture. The dark ages.

  • @aurelian215
    @aurelian215 2 года назад +68

    This is what space documentary should be: calm, relaxed and extremely informative. Nicely done!

    • @loganwolv3393
      @loganwolv3393 2 года назад +3

      And with a light mystirious soundtrack to go with it.

  • @BaconIsNotBiceps
    @BaconIsNotBiceps Год назад +46

    Utterly fascinating. It boggles the mind the size of this universe.

    • @missaamane8580
      @missaamane8580 4 месяца назад

      Like.. how do we even begin to wrap our minds around this

    • @SuperTDSmith
      @SuperTDSmith 3 месяца назад

      By wrapping mouth around sandwich ​@@missaamane8580

    • @oustaz1
      @oustaz1 3 месяца назад

      This is only the first heaven, there are 6 others look up the Quran

    • @anirudhhattangadi3534
      @anirudhhattangadi3534 28 дней назад

      What are the chances that there could be some forms of life in Andromeda galaxy in some of the star systems?

  • @SpartanHighKing14
    @SpartanHighKing14 Год назад +60

    Let's appreciate the photographer who literally had to travel around the universe to get these fantastic pictures

    • @andrewchr
      @andrewchr Год назад

      Imagine if he would lose all photos and videos on his return back to earth atmosphere 😂

  • @adawg3032
    @adawg3032 2 года назад +8

    I bet somewhere in andromeda there are curious minds pondering and observing the Milky Way, with the same curiosity we ponder and observe andromeda.

  • @yenlabuda9289
    @yenlabuda9289 2 года назад +185

    I'm enjoying the fact that you managed to make the video about Andromeda terrifying, yet beautiful.

    • @cassie6583
      @cassie6583 2 года назад +1

      Terrifying? You watch too many horror movies. Astronomy is not terrifying. Your mind needs education.

    • @yenlabuda9289
      @yenlabuda9289 2 года назад +18

      You need to be quiet

    • @bozapub3507
      @bozapub3507 Год назад +1

      @@cassie6583 he didn't say astronomy is terrifying but Andromeda rather. And the only reason why I would disagree that is terrifying is because we are all going to be long gone before it gets the chance to end the chance of life in our galaxy.

    • @cassie6583
      @cassie6583 Год назад

      @@bozapub3507 If you knew anything about gravity which you obviously do not then both of you wouldnt be so terrified. But you seem to think you also can predict the future. If I was you then I would stick to your cartoons and popcorn and try to act like the fat globs of protoplasm which is all you are and uneducated if I can be so bold and stop acting as if you know it all.

    • @sandwich3495
      @sandwich3495 Год назад

      @@cassie6583 Holy run ons 😅😅

  • @Redzen.No.0488
    @Redzen.No.0488 29 дней назад +2

    This shows how insignificant our trifling little planet really is. And how triflingly insignificant human beings are.

  • @MrSridharMurthy
    @MrSridharMurthy 2 года назад +6

    The significance of us humans living in such a vast and unfathomable universe can be answered in just one word - INSIGNIFICANT.

    • @The_Situation
      @The_Situation Год назад +5

      We could be the only thing alive. I'd say that was rather SIGNIFICANT

    • @anirudhhattangadi3534
      @anirudhhattangadi3534 28 дней назад

      ​@@The_Situationwhy do you Say that just because we don't have evidence?

  • @fivedigitcreature
    @fivedigitcreature 2 года назад +172

    One of the best channels within this branch of our galaxy, both scientifically and didactically. Thank you so much for your efforts! 🚀

    • @SonofTheMorningStar666
      @SonofTheMorningStar666 2 года назад +2

      Most definitely!

    • @hardygeoff159
      @hardygeoff159 2 года назад

      Why is it annoying or unwanted? It teaches but not in an annoying way

    • @gingahbeef2604
      @gingahbeef2604 2 года назад +3

      @@hardygeoff159 I got a few different definitions when I looked up didactic. I assume he's speaking of the Didactic *Method*, which is "a teaching method that follows a consistent scientific approach or educational style to present information to students."
      I also saw your definition, as well as "intended to teach, particularly in having moral instruction as an ulterior motive." Although I've heard SEA push a few very mild moral instructions, they basically amounted to "we are puny in the universe, so be good to each other, ok? ok," so I doubt that's what they're referring to here.

    • @fivedigitcreature
      @fivedigitcreature 2 года назад +2

      @@gingahbeef2604 Yes, he was speaking of the 'method of teaching'.

    • @raidermaxx2324
      @raidermaxx2324 2 года назад +2

      "didactically" sweet new word i learned today :)

  • @johnhamilton7762
    @johnhamilton7762 5 месяцев назад +4

    The music and sound effects to this are incredibly atmospheric and added to the sheer wonderment and enjoyment I got. Thankyou. To think of the trillions of planets in this one galaxy and the lives that are going on and have gone on and will go on in this vastness and that we will never know has me in awe. I just wish I could know about them...

  • @astrotherapist
    @astrotherapist 4 месяца назад +5

    You did a fantastic job with this video. I'm utterly amazed at the quality of it all, and think it's one of the best videos ever produced by anyone! Thank you for sharing!

  • @alexdenton9176
    @alexdenton9176 2 года назад +14

    Space is messy, but this galaxy is Messier...
    ... I'll get me coat.

    • @pmgodfrey
      @pmgodfrey 2 года назад

      Well...no. It's pronounced messy-a. Just like uranus is not 'your anus' more like yer-innus.
      It just gets me. lol :)

  • @tombock336
    @tombock336 2 года назад +67

    Sam, your videos are absolute top-tier quality of any Astronomy content on RUclips. Everything is so well thought out and executed. And your attention to detail is second to none. Incredible job, as always!

  • @cyrilsingh3465
    @cyrilsingh3465 Год назад +1

    The makers of this short film have left me spellbound and speechless. A super great film, to say the least.

  • @davehoward22
    @davehoward22 Год назад +3

    Astronomy is fascinating as it is frustrating, as we can see these places,but we are never really going to SEE them,visit them,their allways going to be a photo through a telescope.

  • @Maximum_911
    @Maximum_911 2 года назад +365

    I've always enjoyed watching your videos and I hope you continue to make more in the future.

    • @shevystudio
      @shevystudio 2 года назад +16

      What's the $10 thing under your name?

    • @sea_space
      @sea_space  2 года назад +94

      Sorry I never saw this, thank you so much for the donation! 💙

    • @Plane_Person
      @Plane_Person 2 года назад +28

      @@shevystudio he donated 10 dollars

    • @borisdorofeev5602
      @borisdorofeev5602 Год назад +34

      @@shevystudio He made it rain on Andromedas thickness with 10 $1 bills.

    • @John-14798
      @John-14798 Год назад

      @@shevystudio *I heard that the $10 thing under peoples names gives them everlasting superpowers.* 🦸‍♂️

  • @Rising_Pho3nix_23
    @Rising_Pho3nix_23 2 года назад +6

    Somewhere in the Andromeda galaxy is a race of beings looking at an image of us, looking for us as we are looking for them. It's poetic in a way.

    • @mth469
      @mth469 2 года назад +3

      I doubt that.

    • @stacis.5854
      @stacis.5854 Год назад

      @@mth469 but there’s still a chance!

    • @mth469
      @mth469 Год назад +1

      @@stacis.5854
      a slim one perhaps.
      The issue is not just where in the universe are aliens... but when.
      If they don't exist in our brief time period, we will never know they have existed or are yet to come into existence.
      We may be a million years too early or a billion years too late. They could have lived, reached their peak and died out a billion years before man arose on this Earth.
      The "when" question is bigger than the where.

    • @stacis.5854
      @stacis.5854 Год назад

      @@mth469 I totally agree! There could have been a civilization that lived on a whole other galaxy. Even if they died out before us, there is still chances life can form at any time and age. I think they’re out there somewhere. Considering the number of galaxies and trillions of stars in them. We just don’t have the technology right now to see them.

    • @mth469
      @mth469 Год назад

      @@stacis.5854
      If you believe in UFO phenomenon, then it becomes evident that these beings or machines want to stay out of sight and in the shadows.

  • @gardengeek3041
    @gardengeek3041 Месяц назад

    Masses of first-rate material online is unwatchable due to bad audio. But, this is the FIRST TIME any channel I know of has corrected the problem.
    Thank you so much. Its a superb presentation. The narration is just the right pace.
    Even better, unlike some other astronomy offerings online, the correct images appear on screen at the right time.

  • @aemiliadelroba4022
    @aemiliadelroba4022 Год назад +1

    Andromeda galaxy is my fav galaxy… next to our own .
    The fact that we can see it at night ( naked eye ) is so fantastic!

  • @TheExoplanetsChannel
    @TheExoplanetsChannel 2 года назад +65

    Great video. It's mind-blowing that one day Andromeda will collide with our galaxy!

    • @alexstauffer3359
      @alexstauffer3359 2 года назад +5

      Not "one day", but now.
      According to research published in the Astrophysical Journal, If you include the halo of "gas, dust, and stray stars" that extend beyond the definite edge of a galaxy, it's likely that the Milky Way and Andromeda began colliding just a few thousand years ago.

    • @garvald
      @garvald 2 года назад +3

      @@alexstauffer3359 that's contradictory to this video. I'm no astrophysicist, I'm merely referring to the content. That said, this video specifically refers to the larger diameter of the extended Andromeda Galaxy, not to the Milkyway's extended girth, but I doubt it reaches that far.

  • @ZakisHereNow
    @ZakisHereNow 2 года назад +39

    Your videos are literally the best medication I’ve ever found for my insomnia. I’ve watched them several times each because they’re just amazingly put together and informative, and I’ve fallen asleep listening to them hundreds of times. Thank you…

    • @skeepee
      @skeepee 2 года назад +7

      Ha, I do this too. The videos are mind-bogglingly interesting, but the narration and the production are so soothing I’m swept into the cosmos before I know it 😴

    • @jetpond7904
      @jetpond7904 2 года назад +3

      I don’t have insomnia but I agree

    • @Assassins-creed
      @Assassins-creed Год назад

      You should watch let's find out asmr he does space videos for sleep

    • @BrendaFisher-yi2gm
      @BrendaFisher-yi2gm 2 месяца назад

      same here

  • @taylorwhite636
    @taylorwhite636 Год назад +8

    Fantastic video. I actually named my daughter's middle name Andromeda because I myself am a Sagittarius, and have a deep love for the universe, and thought it'd be appropriate and slightly humorous that Sagittarius A* and Andromeda are connected gravitationally, binding the local group together

  • @BIG_DQNG
    @BIG_DQNG Год назад +2

    Thanks for always giving me something to listen to during work. Graduated high school 5 years ago. I've learned more listening while I work than while I was as school lol

  • @cosicave5179
    @cosicave5179 2 года назад +43

    Excellent.
    I've interrupted my viewing of this video at just six minutes in, to congratulate the creator of SEA videos on his impeccable narration. So far, I have not missed a single word. Thankyou!

  • @herrmeister1981
    @herrmeister1981 2 года назад +112

    There is no other space content creator even in the same galaxy as this man. SEA is by far the best

    • @kennydustin1139
      @kennydustin1139 2 года назад +11

      Melodysheep

    • @zorastin
      @zorastin 2 года назад +8

      Isaac Arthur, John Michael Godier both as equally good as SEA.

    • @hudanofendi3028
      @hudanofendi3028 2 года назад +8

      Leminno pretty good tho, especially "the great silence" one

    • @mushroomsteve
      @mushroomsteve 2 года назад +8

      In addition to those mentioned, I would include Kosmo and Anton Petrov.

    • @SaveWesternCivilisation
      @SaveWesternCivilisation 2 года назад +4

      Yeah, the other space content creators tend to come from Messier 32, Messier 110, or the Triangulum Galaxy... ; - )

  • @oanthata
    @oanthata 2 года назад +18

    So well narrated , wow - this is the best I have seen so far , thank you so much

  • @angelstrong792
    @angelstrong792 Год назад +1

    Beautiful indeed, My Angels in Andromeda Galaxy are waiting for us to visit them. Yes, we are going there!

  • @cwshellhamer342
    @cwshellhamer342 2 года назад +68

    Time to ignore everything else in my life and watch a new and amazing video from SEA. Love everything you do/create!

    • @robertlee3778
      @robertlee3778 2 года назад +6

      Pretty much, yea.
      If everyone on this planet watched this and other similar videos about space and cosmology, I am certain the world would be a better place because we would all realize how small we, humanity, are.
      We would all be nicer to each other.

    • @goose300183
      @goose300183 2 года назад +1

      @@robertlee3778 That's such a good point. It gives you a certain objectivity. Another cool thing to do aside from videos like this is to volunteer for the Galaxy Zoo project. I've been doing that for a while, and it's mindblowing to see countless galaxies and try to classify them. Very few people get to see each one, so it feels special that way. It really helps me chill, and see things from another perspective.

  • @ImDanda
    @ImDanda 2 года назад +7

    We sleeping good tonight. SEA, I hope you don't take that the wrong way. I love the universe and all of its physics and mysteries. Your videoes are super calming and educational.

  • @nogod7184
    @nogod7184 Год назад +4

    If you live in a big city in North America, you almost have zero chance to see our Milky Way.
    You've got to get away from cities at least 50 miles in all directions.
    In a moonless, cloudless night, look up and it's there. Tremendous.

    • @Kunfucious577
      @Kunfucious577 Месяц назад

      Maybe the east coast. The west coast has lots of desserts and mountains you can go to see the Milky Way.

  • @D34ADCH
    @D34ADCH 2 года назад +2

    Stuck in hospital binging your videos because they never get boring.

  • @tcollins7081
    @tcollins7081 2 года назад +50

    I'm just imagining a civilization in our larger neighboring galaxy, wondering about the same thing about the Milky Way, well heck, they would have a different name for our galaxy. 😂 This astronomy video was top notched, I was blown away how well put together it was. 👍

    • @darthdaddy6983
      @darthdaddy6983 Год назад +6

      Imagine we were able to send each other pictures & memes , but text messages would always arrive scrambled .

    • @missaamane8580
      @missaamane8580 4 месяца назад +1

      I think the same. What if they are watching milky way and wondering what that bluish planet next to the sun

  • @DanielVerberne
    @DanielVerberne 2 года назад +30

    11:13 - This video is a great demonstration of why I find 'playing' Space Engine such a soothing, cosmic, almost spiritual experience. Those scenes recorded of you zooming at an impossible speed in Space Engine show just how unthinkably vast everything is!

    • @mas5867
      @mas5867 2 года назад +4

      Space is depressing to me. Objects get billions of years and I will be damn lucky to make 90 yrs.
      But since I believe in mutliverses and you can only arrange molecules inside a space the size of a human in so many ways, I believe I exist in countless universes.
      And I just recently considered this. What are the odds that if universes do exist trillions of years that we would come to be in a universe just 14.7 billion years old. Odds are our universe should be much much older at the point we are able to observe it. There are infinite universes.

    • @DanielVerberne
      @DanielVerberne 2 года назад +4

      @@mas5867 I hear you. I sometimes wish i could 'check in' at any time in the future to see what we or our descendants might learn in the future.

    • @mikeoxmall69420
      @mikeoxmall69420 Год назад +1

      @@mas5867 maybe life isn't possible in a trillion+ year old universe due to lack of stars or high amount of black holes

  • @justdriveon
    @justdriveon Месяц назад +1

    Without a doubt, yours is one of the best astronomy channels on RUclips. Absolutely brilliant work. And thank you so very much!

  • @beleagueredmule2782
    @beleagueredmule2782 3 месяца назад +1

    That train headed our way (sideways) is as large as half the distance it is from us. I cannot fathom how it looks so small.

  • @StarfuryT
    @StarfuryT 2 года назад +11

    I'm a trained astrophysicist, though I'm no longer in academia. So almost nothing in this video is new information for me. But I have to give it to you, you make these interesting even for someone like me, keep it up!

    • @cosmichorizon3273
      @cosmichorizon3273 2 года назад +6

      You know you did well when a professional says he enjoyed it

  • @SteveLionProducer
    @SteveLionProducer 2 года назад +53

    Man this are the types of space videos Ive been looking that explain the history of how we got to today, thanks so much!

  • @ronhammond167
    @ronhammond167 23 дня назад

    Hubble said it all. "Wow"

  • @cratecruncher4974
    @cratecruncher4974 6 месяцев назад +4

    I bought my first telescope many years ago and after a survey of the planets decided a tour of the Messier catalog would be fun. When I got to number 31 I just stopped and spent the rest of the evening admiring that HUGE galaxy. I really had no idea until that moment there was such a monster right next door. I couldn't fit the whole thing into the field of the eyepiece. We're doomed, eventually...

  • @ttrestle
    @ttrestle 2 года назад +4

    My wife and I watched/listened to the original uploaded vid of this content the other day as I threw out my back and she massaged it. It gave us some amazing content to listen to while I was in pain. For that, I thank you 🙏🏻. Much love and respect.

  • @dirkdil8268
    @dirkdil8268 2 года назад +88

    I saw Andromeda successfully for the first time through my telescope a couple of nights ago. A mind blowing experience! The image was not quite up to the standard of these but still. It is really out there. Binoculars will do also. Thanks for the impressive overview. Very timely.

    • @martinhofman80
      @martinhofman80 2 года назад +7

      When I got my first telescope I was like, let's see all those galaxies, there are hundreds of them to be seen right? Turned out that the only recognisable galaxy was Andromeda and the image was kind of blurry. A little disappointing but at least I knew what I was dealing with.

    • @sentientflower7891
      @sentientflower7891 2 года назад +9

      @@martinhofman80 Anyone who has seen photographs of galaxies will be disappointed by a telescope since your eyes aren't equipped to handle light like a camera.

    • @Rodneytheproducer1986
      @Rodneytheproducer1986 2 года назад +1

      Beautiful sight bet

  • @kevinmalone3210
    @kevinmalone3210 Год назад +2

    I always wanted to visited the Andromeda galaxy. I finally got the opportunity.

  • @shouldersofgiants4649
    @shouldersofgiants4649 2 года назад +187

    One of my favorite channels on RUclips. Incredibly well made and detailed. Thank you so very much!

  • @macbuff81
    @macbuff81 2 года назад +6

    It always amazes me that many dots in the night sky are not just planets and stars, but also entire galaxies just like our own. Maybe some an intelligent being from one or more or those galaxies and looking at the Milky Way and is just as amazed :)

    • @garvald
      @garvald 2 года назад

      Not many.... I think it's only 3, with only Andromeda visible in the Northern Hemisphere. By "dots" I'm assuming you mean with the naked eye :)

  • @johnishikawa2200
    @johnishikawa2200 Год назад +8

    Less than 100 years ago, the stars in the night sky were considered by many to be "fixed", and permanent. But now all of the scholars, and even the rank and file person with at least a mild curiosity about the cosmos, realizes that stars, and even galaxies, have a life span-not unlike us ourselves!

  • @DomenicoCarucci-tn9nh
    @DomenicoCarucci-tn9nh 5 месяцев назад +2

    Semplicemente meraviglioso, l'Universo non finisce mai di stupire.... ringrazio tutti per la possibilità che danno a tutti di vedere il Creato..... grazie ancora di❤

  • @eam2564
    @eam2564 2 года назад +6

    Always fascinated by Andromeda Galaxy Everytime I see it in the sky feels like it's calling you from the far darkness but also wanting to tell you something about us or about them I am sure there's beings wondering the same thing as we.
    Maybe it's just curiosity or particle entanglement to there.
    That mystery it's something you can't describe in words, the universe is very beautiful indeed.

    • @gamecolor4519
      @gamecolor4519 2 года назад

      I have dreams about Andromeda there are gods dwelling there and all sorts of aliens species

  • @wettoast8141
    @wettoast8141 2 года назад +3

    Our boi sea has returned

  • @Whatamysaid
    @Whatamysaid Год назад +7

    I need you to know, that your videos are next level. Each and every fascinating film
    has broadened my understanding of our universe immensely. Visually, each video is more elegant and beautiful than the next. Your narration is not only soothing to the ear, and poetic, but you’ve mastered the art of presenting these highly complex scientific concepts in a way that’s easily 😅understood by a simpleton like myself. I FINALLY FEEL LIKE I HAVE found my go to- FAVORITE channel on all things universe/space/etc

    • @louise_rose
      @louise_rose Год назад

      Yes, excellent video and very interesting!

    • @DaytonAutika
      @DaytonAutika 10 месяцев назад

      Ya going to cry about it? Christ

  • @timwhittey4121
    @timwhittey4121 28 дней назад +1

    I heard that Marvin was last spotted in Andromeda, rusting in a cupboard and moaning that the Andromedeans treat him worse than that lot from the Milky Way.

  • @Dom21221
    @Dom21221 2 года назад +5

    Please Never stop making videos. Seriously. I watched every video from your channel and it’s amazing. Cant wait for your James Webb content

  • @RobJ71107
    @RobJ71107 2 года назад +11

    Would have been appropriate to mention how critical the tireless work of Havard 'Computer' Henrietta Leavitt was in helping Hubble make his breakthrough. She would have been nominated for the Noble Prize had she not died suddenly from stomach cancer. Her work laid the foundation for future astronomical distance calculations.

  • @mattye3173
    @mattye3173 2 года назад +4

    This deserves so much more than 2 mil views, this deserves so much more attention than it is recieving rn, this is so much information compressed in one video, so much production quality, I praise you good sir

    • @DaytonAutika
      @DaytonAutika 10 месяцев назад

      You're not that bright bro.

  • @5thpixel
    @5thpixel Год назад +5

    It's fascinating to compare how little we knew only a few hundred years ago to what we know now and what's left to discover.

    • @alabastergreen7444
      @alabastergreen7444 11 месяцев назад +1

      In a few hundred years they'll be comparing how little we knew compared to them

    • @5thpixel
      @5thpixel 10 месяцев назад

      @@alabastergreen7444 precisely. There are things yet to be invented that we don't know we can't live without.

  • @jimmie8987
    @jimmie8987 2 года назад +45

    Thankyou once again for another amazing video we appreciate the effort you put in to make these absolute masterpieces that wouldn't look out of place on the discovery channel.

    • @Pozla93
      @Pozla93 2 года назад +7

      Oh they absolutely would look out of place on Discovery channel... Compared to all the rubbish they show nowadays. SEA would shine through like a quasar. 😍

  • @Rinshik0
    @Rinshik0 2 года назад +44

    Another amazing video. Just wanted to say that this is by far my favorite space and science related channel. Your videos are as captivating as they are informative, and I always have to drop whatever I'm doing and watch when I see a new upload!

  • @climberat1
    @climberat1 Месяц назад

    Wow. This documentary is fantastic. I first “discovered” Andromeda for myself only about 7 years ago while flying at 25,000 ft over Somalia, wearing night vision goggles. I could focus all the countless stars to pin points of light…except this one. This one fairly large star just simply refused to come into focus. Later that night, back on the ground, I did a little research and had my mind blown to find out it was an entire galaxy. I now own an 11 inch Schmidt-Cassegrain.

  • @YuioaIsEarly
    @YuioaIsEarly Год назад +3

    This is my favourite galaxy

  • @Nikki_Catnip
    @Nikki_Catnip 2 года назад +26

    Every video you make is an absolute Masterpiece. I don’t understand why you don’t have millions of subscribers. People are really missing out.

    • @monolithgeometry3221
      @monolithgeometry3221 2 года назад

      Millions ? Have you "visited " planet Earth lately? At least, America . Ugh

  • @DostoenVnimaniay
    @DostoenVnimaniay 2 года назад +7

    Спасибо!

    • @sea_space
      @sea_space  2 года назад +2

      Thank you for the donation 😊💙

    • @janvaljan4831
      @janvaljan4831 2 года назад

      @@sea_space how can be done? (donation)

    • @sea_space
      @sea_space  2 года назад

      @@janvaljan4831 When watching a video there's a little button that says "

  • @jag4451
    @jag4451 Год назад +1

    @SEA your close the 1million sub mark, well deserved

  • @TheUnknowncaller12
    @TheUnknowncaller12 8 месяцев назад +3

    Absolutely love your local group Galaxy breakdowns!

    • @sea_space
      @sea_space  8 месяцев назад +1

      And another one! Thank you so much again for your continued generosity! 💙

  • @Matty88301
    @Matty88301 2 года назад +80

    A guaranteed 35 minutes worth of quality content awaits us all.

  • @erickillian313
    @erickillian313 2 года назад +43

    I was so excited to see a new video come up, great work once again. Can hardly imagine just 100 years ago the milky way was the universe. How far we've come and I love how you pulled in this narrative to the Andromeda story. Lastly, don't change your narration style ever - that's half the reason I'm here.

    • @chm1701
      @chm1701 2 года назад +2

      Well said.

    • @HardRockMaster7577
      @HardRockMaster7577 2 года назад +3

      Once Webb gets up and fully operational, I wonder what new constructs of the Universe will be discovered and revealed, 100 years on from when many astronomers reluctantly had to accept that the Milky Way was not all there was...

    • @souloftheage
      @souloftheage 2 года назад +3

      You are so correct, Eric. We have come so far in just a little over a couple of hundred years.
      Where will we be in 500 years?.
      Wish I could be here to watch it all pan out.

    • @jacquesjtheripper5922
      @jacquesjtheripper5922 2 года назад +2

      Just the milky way is already mind boggling, with what, 100 billion stars mb, and evn more planets perhaps.

    • @HardRockMaster7577
      @HardRockMaster7577 2 года назад +2

      @@jacquesjtheripper5922 If all of the Universe consisted of the just the Milky Way, that in itself, would still be mind blowing...

  • @barkasz6066
    @barkasz6066 Год назад +9

    As much as I am fascinated by the possibility of alien life in our galaxy, the idea of beings living in Andromeda or one of our satellite galaxies and looking at our galaxy always gives me goosebumps. Also just imagine the view from one of those satellite galaxies!

  • @chuck5419
    @chuck5419 Год назад +2

    Andromeda is definitely teeming with life, I would bet my life on it

  • @ChilliusVGM
    @ChilliusVGM 2 года назад +7

    thank you for having subtitles, i take in information so much better when i can read what i'm hearing alongside watching :)

  • @johnnyutah4584
    @johnnyutah4584 2 года назад +6

    Best presentation on the web !

  • @stephenbesley3177
    @stephenbesley3177 4 месяца назад +1

    I can understand why astronomers of centuries past will have struggled with the concept of other galaxies. The distances and numbers involved boggles the mind. And these are our nearest neighbours!

  • @davsaltego
    @davsaltego 3 месяца назад

    Got chills thinking: it’s there, right there, you can see it, you can see it’s stars. Let’s go there at the speed of light. 2.5 million years.

  • @elblack25
    @elblack25 2 года назад +14

    dude, that Shapley was so wrong, yet so close... damn...
    (you're becoming my favourite content creator, the voice tone, the script, the research, the flow of the content... top tier stuff).

    • @zenokarlsbach4292
      @zenokarlsbach4292 2 года назад +1

      Kapteyn keeps on counting, and counting, and counting ..

  • @TalhaTETBIRT
    @TalhaTETBIRT 2 года назад +4

    Yesss a new video to sleep on 🙈🙈

  • @tscottshea
    @tscottshea Год назад +2

    Excellent science teaching! Fantastic visuals. Always wanted to know more about the Andromeda galaxy. Thank you!

  • @cokezzz8249
    @cokezzz8249 10 месяцев назад +1

    Somewhere in Andromeda, on one of its stars and inhabitant planet there is probably a video of them talking about the journey to the Milky Way

  • @edwardtorres3987
    @edwardtorres3987 2 года назад +24

    As a big fan of astronomy I can say this video was one of the best if not the best videos ever uploaded! I subscribed and look forward to watching many more!

  • @thatdude1435
    @thatdude1435 2 года назад +30

    One of the absolute best space youtubers out there! 100%!

  • @mbarker_lng
    @mbarker_lng Год назад +4

    A beautiful video. I can't help but be envious of any life in one of Andromeda's satellite galaxies. Imagine how awesome it would be to look up an see its wonder vs. a sea of white dots.

  • @k4atsy
    @k4atsy 6 месяцев назад +1

    It's comin right for us!

  • @daniel.lopresti
    @daniel.lopresti 2 года назад +96

    I'm glad I remembered having watched a bunch of your videos a while back and recently searched for you again and subscribed!
    I like the way you present our local friendly galaxy in an almost anthropomorphic way and feel almost sad for its eventual demise in a way you might experience a tragic ending in a film :)
    (Essentially a narrative character arc that engages more than any dry textbook-style narration could...)

    • @daniel.lopresti
      @daniel.lopresti 2 года назад +4

      Three cheers for the local group!

    • @Geezer-yf8hv
      @Geezer-yf8hv 2 года назад +2

      Fun Fact: Don’t worry about our Galaxy colliding with Andromeda. Our Sun will turn into a Red Giant and cook and swallow Earth long before!

    • @FrozenMermaid666
      @FrozenMermaid666 2 года назад +1

      I am the true/only Princess / Lady / Queen etc, and the real-life Andromeda and the real-life Medusa -- this is so depressing because I was ferced into this wrong mortaI world...

  • @LiquidShadows
    @LiquidShadows 2 года назад +16

    This video was incredible. The history, the visuals, the narration...all of it was flawless. I even watched it on my phone just so that I wouldn't fall asleep. 😂 Can't wait to see what's coming next!

  • @johnhamilton7762
    @johnhamilton7762 9 месяцев назад +6

    It's beautiful. When I see a picture of Andromeda it has me in awe. I think to myself how many lives are going on there? We'll never know and that saddens me...

    • @MrNash-hv5tn
      @MrNash-hv5tn 3 месяца назад

      if you see andromeda and thought of lives out there, surely they were all long gone by now

    • @johnhamilton7762
      @johnhamilton7762 3 месяца назад +1

      Oh sure, no doubt. All I was trying to convey was the wonderment of that fact - and the utter sadness that in the trillion or so solar systems in that one galaxy that we will NEVER know anything about them, their planets, their cultures, their science, their languages or their art. I just feel Sad by it.

  • @SVSunnyJim
    @SVSunnyJim 2 года назад +1

    What a brilliantly edited video. I thoroughly enjoyed listening to the clear and mind blowing narration.

  • @masnaringquest4626
    @masnaringquest4626 2 года назад +3

    This is probably the most comprehensive explanation of Andromeda I have seen.
    Bravo. 👏