Cycles in the Sky: Crash Course Astronomy #3

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  • Опубликовано: 26 янв 2025

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @fluideight
    @fluideight 10 лет назад +1911

    Crash Course Astronomy excites me to no end! This channel is amazing.

    • @crashcourse
      @crashcourse  10 лет назад +217

      Aw, thank you! We're pretty excited about it too, but then, we're a tiny bit biased...
      -Nicole

    • @D0N4R666
      @D0N4R666 10 лет назад +33

      CrashCourse Guys I don´t want to be a smartass, but the earth at 4:00 turns the wrong way around.

    • @badastronomy
      @badastronomy 10 лет назад +48

      CrashCourse I think it's the greatest single channel on RUclips, and I'm completely unbiased.

    • @truboo4268
      @truboo4268 10 лет назад +1

      D0N4R666 Well, they oftentimes mess stuff up.

    • @charlieleon1236
      @charlieleon1236 10 лет назад

      D0N4R666 Actually it is turning the right way. Sun rises in the east and sets in the west so yeah,,,

  • @yocampout
    @yocampout 10 лет назад +805

    I always appreciate scientist that do not feel so superior to the ancients and understand that even with our great technological gains we have lost many things too.

    • @alucardwhitehair
      @alucardwhitehair 10 лет назад +18

      I'm not disagreeing with you but just wondering, what have we lost? Besides the night sky(because astronomers build their observatories away from cities and the problem is easily overcome)

    • @dalex641
      @dalex641 10 лет назад +25

      Garret Griffith I would call it... the feeling. Those people had no advanced math, no astronomical apps on their phones e.t.c and still they knew and saw a lot. They did this not only with another instruments but with another parts of the brain.

    • @sebrussell
      @sebrussell 10 лет назад +29

      dalex641 Maybe it's just because I perceive this sort of thing differently, but that explanation seems similar to me saying that I lose something by wearing glasses. Even without a full range of focal distances, I could still see and understand a lot, but with my glasses on, I see so much more and can make much better judgements about what is going on around me.

    • @yocampout
      @yocampout 10 лет назад +33

      Garret Griffith imo we've lost a daily, intimate relationship with our planet. yeah we know it's great. but it's like the difference between visiting a really awesome grandparent and living with one. now we visit, but the ancients lived everyday getting to hear all the little stories that wouldn't make the holiday highlight reel. they had to devote more time to her, so they got more connected. I think we are now missing that connection. .....ok, maybe that's not the best analogy but that's all I got. :)

    • @alucardwhitehair
      @alucardwhitehair 10 лет назад +5

      sebrussell Exactly! My parents always used to say the same thing. Why do you always wear your glasses when when your reading they would say. Im near sited so I can only see about 6 feet in front of me. I always said that I see the same reading with or without glasses but the glasses help me see everything about the world at will. I feel that while I completely respect others opinions, I feel that I value greater understanding just a LITTLE bit more. I understand where you guys are coming from though.

  • @LoganLovell
    @LoganLovell 8 лет назад +235

    you just taught me, in under 10 minutes, what took my Astronomy professor 2 weeks. And you did it more effectively

  • @Moonbeam143
    @Moonbeam143 10 лет назад +650

    I would love to one day go to an area where no people are in, where there is no man made lights anywhere and look up into the night sky.

    • @koffieslikkersenior
      @koffieslikkersenior 10 лет назад +37

      I went to Angola and I saw the Milky Way. It's astonishing

    • @marygeorge1872
      @marygeorge1872 7 лет назад +11

      Go to Nebraska

    • @maharshiguin7813
      @maharshiguin7813 6 лет назад +8

      that's in my life goals list

    • @thatwierdkid.
      @thatwierdkid. 6 лет назад +10

      Moon... What your saying is true...
      I think that would be a dream of every astronomer.. Won't it?
      As per the development in industrialization, more and more lights(like vapor lights) is fading the beautiful lights of the night sky...
      When I was little, I use to watch the night sky all the time(of course at night), is spend hours and hours just watching and thinking... What's there imaging what could be there... At last my mom have to take me to my room as I end up sleeping... 😅
      But what's the point is that I don't like it doing now, cause even if I try. I can't see the sky clearly... And that frustrates me up... and I'm not talking about ten or fifteen years... I'm talking about just five years ago...!!!
      I think I wrote it to long... 😅

    • @thatwierdkid.
      @thatwierdkid. 6 лет назад

      @@G.D.goodwill your lucky... 😭

  • @carte0000blanche
    @carte0000blanche 10 лет назад +486

    I hope this branches out into more Astro Physics

    • @SciJoy
      @SciJoy 10 лет назад +25

      Me too. I love astrophysics.

    • @badastronomy
      @badastronomy 10 лет назад +138

      I'll be covering a lot of topics in this series, including some astrophysics (like how light gets emitted in gas clouds; how stars form, evolve, and die; stuff like that). I hope you like it!

    • @SofosProject
      @SofosProject 10 лет назад +11

      ***** I'd be really interested in hearing about how gravity affects space, because that's always an important concept when discussing black holes. :)

    • @h85935
      @h85935 10 лет назад +3

      In the first episode you said you would talk about subatomic particles. What exactly did you mean by that? What will you be going over? Will you get into theoretical physics and astrophysical topics? Also, how many episodes of this do you think there will be? This is probably my favorite CrashCourse so far by the way! :)

    • @arthurtung3112
      @arthurtung3112 10 лет назад +2

      YES, PLEASE.

  • @ThePadawan453
    @ThePadawan453 8 лет назад +549

    It's really refreshing to hear someone say that a thing like astrology is silly, without being afraid to offend someone. Because, come one. Astrology is nuts.

    • @VayneArelius1
      @VayneArelius1 8 лет назад +61

      Refreshing? Offend? What are you talking about? Anyone with a scientific viewpoint will tell you astrology is a load of BS. This isn't news lol

    • @rittenbrake1613
      @rittenbrake1613 6 лет назад +5

      What about Astrological transit? solved the precession problem yet ?

    • @rittenbrake1613
      @rittenbrake1613 6 лет назад +5

      What about Astrological transit? solved the precession problem yet ?

    • @lindseyykaitlin
      @lindseyykaitlin 4 года назад +91

      Why is it so hard for people to just respect people who believe in things that they don’t?

  • @blissfullyblazing3890
    @blissfullyblazing3890 9 лет назад +32

    This series is completely amazing, it has inspired me to learn more about astronomy and potentially even pursue it in the future, so greatful for these videos

    • @Codiliabra
      @Codiliabra 8 лет назад +1

      Yes! It is very intriguing.

  • @Ironhatchy
    @Ironhatchy 9 лет назад +130

    It always amazes me how life is situated. The way stars and planets dance. How can someone not want to understand why and how it is that we exist. In a world where people think they know it all, we come to see how much we actually don't know at all. Peace and love fellow humans.

  • @Codiliabra
    @Codiliabra 8 лет назад +270

    I wanna pursue astronomy. It is amazing, yet scary.

    • @devonyanne
      @devonyanne 6 лет назад +22

      I want to as well. All the math involved is what scares me, and I'm in accounting.

    • @he.quetzal4
      @he.quetzal4 6 лет назад +6

      Are you aaron burr, sir?

    • @ghania5869
      @ghania5869 6 лет назад +33

      Astronomy might be scary but it's interesting to study about the other worlds. Did you all know that Jupiter is the reason why planet earth isn't a pit of asteroids? It's because the gravitational force of Jupiter is so great that anything that comes within its boundaries will eventually get sucked in and ultimately spat back into the farther regions of the solar system? Neat huh?

    • @stefanherrera6854
      @stefanherrera6854 5 лет назад +6

      I want to be an astrophysicist and was woundering (in astronomy) what order I have learn the math for it. Is it factual information first and then math or vice versa?

    • @SubhanKhan-lm9eo
      @SubhanKhan-lm9eo 5 лет назад +7

      @@ghania5869 yes sir I did 😁 also did you know its made completely out of gas? And that it's the fastest spinning planet in the solar system? And that the clouds are 50km thick? And that it has rings and is made almost completely out of gas and that the center is hotter than the surface of the sun? 😂

  • @carlosmaldonado5411
    @carlosmaldonado5411 9 лет назад +18

    I'm taking notes! I feel smarter by the episode!!!! Thanks a bunch!

  • @drink15
    @drink15 10 лет назад +81

    As a kid, it blew my mind that Australia had X-mas in the summer.

    • @T25de
      @T25de 10 лет назад +1

      Arraik Cruor santa, the mushroom shaman.

    • @BosonCollider
      @BosonCollider 10 лет назад

      Arraik Cruor
      Out of curiosity, do you still get snow in July? Or is it too hot where you live?

    • @roostewrum
      @roostewrum 10 лет назад +8

      BosonCollider To put it in perspective, Sydney is roughly the same distance from the equator as Los Angeles. We do get consistent winter snow in the mountains of the Great Dividing Range and occasionally Tasmania and extremely rarely elsewhere like in Western Australia.

    • @jeanagnocte5775
      @jeanagnocte5775 10 лет назад +2

      BosonCollider
      Snow in the major cities is a once-in-a-century kind of event. Snow in the alpine region is regular, but only for a few months each year.

    • @katelynpeschel4469
      @katelynpeschel4469 9 лет назад +16

      As a kid it blew my mind that Christmas in winter was an actual thing. I thought that it was just a thing on tv for some reason 😂

  • @BosonCollider
    @BosonCollider 10 лет назад +80

    3:56 isn't the earth rotating the wrong way?

    • @HeinzP100
      @HeinzP100 10 лет назад +24

      Good catch. 10 points for Gryffindor :-)
      They may need to hire a science continuity checker.

    • @crashcourse
      @crashcourse  10 лет назад +128

      HeinzP100 We do have people looking these things over, but every now and then stuff falls through. To err is human and all that. Speaking of, I'm betting those 10 points really go to Ravenclaw. What say you, BosonCollider?
      -Nicole

    • @BosonCollider
      @BosonCollider 10 лет назад +44

      CrashCourse
      Ravenclaw is good. ; )
      I thank my hours of playing kerbal space program with mods. When you've seen Earth rotate from space many times you notice things like this very quickly. Otherwise I would've known it intellectually but I wouldn't have noticed it on the spot.

    • @krishnagirap4847
      @krishnagirap4847 8 лет назад

      BosonCollider I am a Ravenclaw too.

    • @krishnamshinde5589
      @krishnamshinde5589 6 лет назад +1

      I'm slytherin

  • @brenosantosalbuquerque6912
    @brenosantosalbuquerque6912 8 лет назад +12

    The universe belongs to EVERYONE, that's amazing to think about!!!!!!

  • @hedgehog3180
    @hedgehog3180 9 лет назад +404

    "Which is one of the many reasons astrology is silly." Haha ok I like this man now. He's definitely cool.

    • @elmergomez6835
      @elmergomez6835 8 лет назад +31

      seriously. I have a friend who makes it a point to mention astrology whenever I do anything. "Well that's because you're a Gemini", or "of course you think like that, you're a Gemini". what should I tell her to get her to shut up and potentially get her to see things more logically?

    • @JohnSmith-nr9zh
      @JohnSmith-nr9zh 8 лет назад +28

      +Elmer G Ask her to predict your decisions based on your supposed astrological traits. If it's so obvious that a Gemini would do that, then she should have no trouble predicting your decisions.

    • @theuncalledfor
      @theuncalledfor 8 лет назад +22

      Punch her in the face and tell her to STFU.

    •  8 лет назад +22

      You can show her this videos, and let the truth reveal itself. No need to shut her up, give her the choice to see all points of view, if she is smart and humble, then she will change her "silly" ways. Be humble yourself also, no truth gives right to shut no one up.

    • @lilolebob
      @lilolebob 8 лет назад +15

      There is a free program called stellarium. You can adjust the date and time to show how the constellations "entered" the sun 2000 years ago, when they were first named.
      And then compare it to now and see that our drift has put the astrological signs off by one month.

  • @matthewrodrigues3734
    @matthewrodrigues3734 10 лет назад +15

    You're doing an awesome job Phil!
    Keep it up!!!
    P.S Your course has inspired me to become an astronomer😁

  • @mint_eaz
    @mint_eaz 10 лет назад +3

    oh man I'm so hyped about this series now!!! I hope they keep this up for a while, especially considering it's what I want to do in college and whatnot. I love that they keep the terms simple enough for anyone to understand, too, as in I'm sure most of their videos, and words that not everyone would know they define and explain. I love this channel, I know there's probably a lot of these comments but I had to share my thoughts as well.

  • @Kingricky76
    @Kingricky76 9 лет назад +3

    absolutely love these shows! The teaching pace and level is perfect! THANK YOU! !

  • @Mousepad051
    @Mousepad051 10 лет назад +3

    I'm really enjoying this series! Phil is a great teacher, and I feel like i can listen to him talk about this stuff all day, and not get bored! Thanks Crash Course!

  • @Matthew-lu4sf
    @Matthew-lu4sf 10 лет назад +4

    I like that they are bringing new people onto the show. Hank and John are cool, but it's cool to see new faces. Plus those two can only do so much, now we get even more variety!

  • @victoria_bongiorno
    @victoria_bongiorno 9 лет назад +6

    1. I'm really enjoying these videos. I find astronomy fascinating, and you explain it in a wonderfully engaging way.
    2. If you (or anyone else) have any interest in it, you might want to look into astrology a bit more. Astrology goes way beyond silly horoscopes in newspapers (which really are ridiculous). It's much more complicated and thoughtful than you might assume. It's actually very interesting.

  • @digitalmimi
    @digitalmimi 10 лет назад +4

    To everyone here who is saying this stuff is way to easy, and all common knowledge:
    Firstly, this is an intro series. Its great that someone is making a difficult topic easily accessible to people who know nothing about Astronomy.
    Secondly, if you've watched other crash courses, such as Biology, you'll know that they also start pretty simple. The first episodes of biology crash course were what I learned at 13/14 years old. But the information gets more complex as you continue.
    Lastly, if it's really that boring, watch someone else. Let the rest of us enjoy.

  • @ffggddss
    @ffggddss 9 лет назад +1

    Nits to pick:
    • The brief animation of Earth spinning on its axis (≈ 3:54 - 4:03), shows it rotating in the wrong direction.
    • I expected the lunar, as well as diurnal and annual cycles, to be higlighted; but it was missing completely. All three were highly important to the ancients.
    But in the end, these really are only nits. I'm only mentioning them in the hope of providing some microscopic future improvements.
    This is a wonderful, wonderful series of videos, Phil!!

    • @ffggddss
      @ffggddss 9 лет назад

      +ffggddss
      And now I see that the next one in the series covers the lunar thing.

  • @buzzyx3
    @buzzyx3 10 лет назад +42

    DO A CRASH COURSE CRIMINOLOGY

  • @astrid1870
    @astrid1870 9 лет назад +1

    I've always loved astrology. Just looking up at the sky gives you a sense of endless wonder.

  • @TheJulietxo
    @TheJulietxo 8 лет назад +17

    I'd love more than anything to enjoy the night sky with my own eyes. Unfortunately I live in "the city that never sleeps"

  • @curt2616
    @curt2616 5 лет назад +2

    It is really cool having had taken an astronomy course to see how perfectly aligned in order this material is to the course material I had, great work.

  • @Melanizing
    @Melanizing 10 лет назад +5

    Really enjoying this so far, looking forward to future episodes. For me personally, it's much easier to learn & comprehend when there are visuals to go along with the lecture. I would love to see more animation while Phil is explaining things - maybe even just a window on the right of the screen next to him with a small visual representation of what he is describing. At any rate, very enjoyable and I've been a fan of Bad Astronomy blog for a long time nice to see you in Crash Course Phil!

  • @JWM80
    @JWM80 4 года назад +14

    Hi, love your crash course astronomy videos. Just a note of clarity on this one, the astrological system that's widely used today is the tropical zodiac, which is based upon the seasons thus always begins with 0° of 'tropical' Aries on the date of the northern hemisphere's spring/vernal equinox. Tropical zodiac signs are different to the constellations but share the same names - hence the confusion. There is also the less common sidereal zodiac, which is still based upon the fixed stars of the constellations and does apply precession.

  • @chipo715
    @chipo715 10 лет назад +7

    Hands down CrashCourse is the best channel on RUclips. I wish we had this when I was in school. I was gonna say that unlike CrashCourse History CrashCourse Astronomy's comment section won't be a flame war of who's right and wrong but then I remembered this is the internet. And the Internet should never be underestimated in it's ability to create debate

  • @picknikbasket
    @picknikbasket 10 лет назад +1

    Loving these Crash Courses, Phil is a master among masters. Great stuff

  • @milkteaful
    @milkteaful 9 лет назад +13

    i wish you were our astronomy professor
    ugh finals tmr

  • @CorinneDemyanovich
    @CorinneDemyanovich 10 лет назад +1

    CrashCourse You forgot to add this to the Astronomy playlist and I almost missed it! In other news, I'm taking an Astronomy class this semester at college, so this channel is super helpful! Thanks a bunch! :)

  • @johnd9008
    @johnd9008 5 лет назад +4

    Love all your teaching! One request: Don't edit out your natural breathing (rest) points. A natural rest point is a great spot to digest the wealth of information you share. Hope you make much more of these great videos!

  • @innocent_fugitive
    @innocent_fugitive 10 лет назад

    Everything about this is awesome. For the last few years I've been trying to build a map of the stars in my head; where the moon was, where the Earth was in orbit and where the hell I was on the surface of the Earth. In recent weeks I think I've finally put together a natural understanding of where I am in 3D space and it's mind-blowing every time I think about it.
    Your videos were obviously made with me in mind and I had to let you know how much I appreciate that. Sorry, everyone else.

  • @renatosas
    @renatosas 9 лет назад +33

    "... one of the many reasons Astrology is silly," LOVED IT!

    • @rittenbrake1613
      @rittenbrake1613 6 лет назад

      What about Astrological transit? solved the precession problem yet ?

    • @TheWolfboy180
      @TheWolfboy180 6 лет назад +10

      @@rittenbrake1613 I keep seeing people like you on comment sections, copy-pasting the same things. If you need help getting a life, you can find one at your local supermarket, right next to the clues.

    • @rittenbrake1613
      @rittenbrake1613 6 лет назад

      @@TheWolfboy180 hello do u dare to talk to me in person? I m thinking u r one of those ignorant people keep banning the new birth of an idea like those people suppressing science development at the early stage.

    • @rittenbrake1613
      @rittenbrake1613 6 лет назад

      @@TheWolfboy180 I m sorry your ignorance completely pissed me off ,u r insulting all the people who are studying the rule of this dimension ,my comment is a very academic one , I m genuinely analysing the situation, if your IQ is too low to understand please shut up and go to YOUR local supermarket.

    • @TheWolfboy180
      @TheWolfboy180 6 лет назад +11

      @@rittenbrake1613 I would dare talk to you in person. You comparing astrology to the early development of science is nonsense.
      Science was born of a desire to understand the world. It, by definition, has to be flexible, because theories change as new evidence is introduced. But it does not bend to claims with no evidence. If you truly believe astrology is a science, I suggest you do your research. Find out more about studies on astrology.
      Just because science was once an underdog doesn't mean the current underdog status of pseudoscience isn't warranted. "New" ideas in science are worth nothing if their pretense is built upon tradition and bold claims without explanation and nothing else.
      Your comment is not an academic one. If you'd like to see a genuine analysis of the situation, start with these sources: Thagard, Paul R. (1978). "Why Astrology is a Pseudoscience". Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association. 1: 223-234. doi:10.1086/psaprocbienmeetp.1978.1.192639.
      Astrology. Encyclopædia Britannica.
      Sven Ove Hansson; Edward N. Zalta. "Science and Pseudo-Science". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved 6 July 2012.
      "Astronomical Pseudo-Science: A Skeptic's Resource List". Astronomical Society of the Pacific.
      Hartmann, P.; Reuter, M.; Nyborga, H. (May 2006). "The relationship between date of birth and individual differences in personality and general intelligence: A large-scale study". Personality and Individual Differences. 40 (7): 1349-1362. doi:10.1016/j.paid.2005.11.017.
      Try to find ways to speak that don't mislead gullible people like yourself.

  • @ChelCjustis
    @ChelCjustis 10 лет назад

    I am student teaching in 3rd grade right now and this video is almost exactly the curriculum I've been teaching for the last week. Loved hearing it in other words and affirmation that I understood it all right!

  • @MattisProbably
    @MattisProbably 10 лет назад +30

    Thank you for calling astrology silly :3
    Also, the fact that we are closer to the sun in January makes the misconception about seasons even more funny to me. So thanks for that as well!

  • @lindqvistsandra
    @lindqvistsandra 6 лет назад

    I spend 3 months in Mongolia, far away from Ulaan-Batar and that´s when I fell in love with the night sky! Growing up in a big city I´ve never actually seen the sky before. It´s def. a loss. Thank you for these videos and please excuse my bad english.

  • @bakomusha
    @bakomusha 10 лет назад +9

    I have lived my ENTIRE LIFE in the Inland Empire area of Southern California, due to smog I can only see the brightest objects in the sky in the remotest locations. Even then there dim and not numerous, we only have the moon. I was 24 (im soon to be 29) years old before I saw the vaguest hint of the Milky Way while visiting Spokane Washington. I was 27 before I saw the night sky in all its glory, and I wept.

  • @benaaronmusic
    @benaaronmusic 10 лет назад +2

    Thank you for the Crash Course in Astronomy, Phil. I can't wait for more episodes.

  • @erikaerickson4623
    @erikaerickson4623 8 лет назад +7

    I admire how you included your passion for wonder and appreciation for the beautifully created universe at the end of the lesson!

  • @tuna2724
    @tuna2724 2 года назад

    My dad always told me stories revolving around astronomy when I was a child. Watching this really brings me back. Thanks for the amazing video 😊😊

  • @saltaloncreative
    @saltaloncreative 10 лет назад +6

    Knowing that the earth is closest to the sun in January makes me inexplicably happy.

  • @anthonybatista9136
    @anthonybatista9136 10 лет назад +1

    This is an amazing series, Phil you making astronomy so dam sexy

  • @elliottmcollins
    @elliottmcollins 10 лет назад +98

    This material is a little slow, but I look forward to the more complicated topics to come.

    • @evangregory14
      @evangregory14 10 лет назад +5

      I don't personally think it's the material, it's the delivery.

    • @OMGanger
      @OMGanger 10 лет назад +2

      No I'm pretty sure it's still slow for the average person.

    • @evangregory14
      @evangregory14 10 лет назад +4

      It may be, I didn't finish the video this guy gets on my nerves, I dunno what it is. Unfortunately cosmology is one of my favorite subjects, I was really looking forward to this series.

    • @ladymadamblueberry
      @ladymadamblueberry 10 лет назад +23

      I think that everytime you start on a subject. It is essential that you start at the very basic and move up to more complicated topics just to cover all the bases. The same logic applies in school with people's programs. Every first week or so of school is the basic, or recap from last courses. Then move on to the new stuff.

    • @elliottmcollins
      @elliottmcollins 10 лет назад +4

      Arraik Cruor I agree, and I'll be back once he gets to things less common than "Planets move in the sky". The other CC series are for high schoolers, and this seems designed for elementary and middle schoolers, but that may be perfect. I never would have gotten into math or science without first being _psyched_ about the existence of planets and galaxies.
      He may also be speaking more slowly than John or Hank, but of course a lot of people hate that about the Green Brothers.

  • @elisahaugenborges4432
    @elisahaugenborges4432 4 года назад +1

    I love that he starts out so basic so that he later can discuss about dark matter and dark holes

  • @ndbiet
    @ndbiet 10 лет назад +30

    OOOOOOOOOO i can now slap my geology teacher so hard for keep denying the season is caused by the earth tilt and NOT and earth elliptical orbit.

    • @pancake7649
      @pancake7649 6 лет назад +5

      ndbiet I wouldn't actually slap them, but please nag them like a child would about it.

  • @nickhight
    @nickhight 10 лет назад +2

    Southern-hemispherer here, just letting you all know that summer is amazing right now. ;)

  • @rickyvehar7716
    @rickyvehar7716 10 лет назад +35

    AH!! 5:30 that weird change in sound quality!

    • @badastronomy
      @badastronomy 10 лет назад +16

      Holy cats you could hear that? I had to re-record a bit of audio to be inserted right there. If I were watching the video I don't think I would've noticed! Good ears. :)

    • @LaydayEruanna
      @LaydayEruanna 10 лет назад +3

      ***** It is noticeable even on speakers, but no problem. :)

    • @JoshWright396
      @JoshWright396 10 лет назад +3

      ***** Yeah, it definitely stuck out to me as well... Much lower bitrate than the rest of the audio. I also found the post-production 'zooms' to be annoying (cropping to simulate a zoom, resulting in noticeably lower resolution). The content is fantastic though!

    • @sion8
      @sion8 10 лет назад

      Yeah I know so weird!

    • @brycealley5457
      @brycealley5457 9 лет назад

      +Derrick Vehar Yeah, I noticed that too. We can only assume that he recorded that bit from within his spacesuit.

  • @cris_with_no_h
    @cris_with_no_h 7 лет назад

    Love this video! As someone quite interested in astronomy, I learned a lot more than I expected from this video. Not only was the information I already know about cycles in the sky (such as the zodiac, the movement of stars, precession) reinforced, I also came to learn more that I didn't know yet before. I also appreciate that they took time to tell us what we've lost in the onset of new technology when we abandoned observation through the naked eye (like our ancestors did). After all, many of the things we have come to accept as fact or common knowledge came from extensive observation by ancient people without the use of telescopes.

  • @thetentman3445
    @thetentman3445 9 лет назад +22

    he said astrology was silly. He was being polite. Nice job Dr. Plait.

  • @Carlsagan98
    @Carlsagan98 10 лет назад

    This talk about precession reminds me of a time this June when I ran into a homeless man in a park and we struck up a conversation about the zodiac. When he asked where the sun was in the zodiac, I pulled out my phone and showed him on an app where it was and he got confused because according to horoscopes, the sun should have been in Gemini, but it wasn't. He asked me why and I didn't know, but now I do. Thank you, crash course!

  • @michellechu9242
    @michellechu9242 10 лет назад +7

    I really like this series of astronomy episodes! I watch the stars almost every night, they are amazing. I noticed the change as well ^-^

  • @B4brenda
    @B4brenda 10 лет назад +1

    Love it so much!!! CC Astronomy makes me feel fulfilled. I love learning and I love science.

  • @zoejeffers6857
    @zoejeffers6857 10 лет назад +23

    "One of the many reasons astrology is silly" Loving crash course astronomy!

  • @cwang22
    @cwang22 7 лет назад

    Don't ever stop producing content. This is too awesome.

  • @bigspooks8652
    @bigspooks8652 8 лет назад +27

    Thanks crash course I proved my science teacher wrong

    •  8 лет назад +5

      So, he learned something, and you learnt nothing.

    • @bigspooks8652
      @bigspooks8652 8 лет назад +2

      yup

    • @FromthisInstanceOn
      @FromthisInstanceOn 8 лет назад +3

      a teacher needs an education too. :D

  • @VenseyNess
    @VenseyNess 10 лет назад +1

    I realize that you guys have probably already filmed this entire series, and are giving thought cafe time to add in their tidbits of awesomeness, but I think it'd be amazing if you covered pulsars and quasars later in the series! They're one of my favorite parts of the cosmos.

  • @cactusface23
    @cactusface23 10 лет назад +3

    "Those folks long ago were tied to the sky; They knew it like you know the streets in your neighborhood" Except when some tried to understand it deeper, those exact folks prosecuted them for heresy.

  • @samkorr5579
    @samkorr5579 2 года назад

    I was introduced to the subject by the astronomy series "The Universe" (broadcast on German television). It is great to have this endless topic taught by enthusiasts like Michelle Thaller or Phil Plait. The non-mathematical approach makes it possible for anyone interested to get started. I will motivate my young daughter to take an early interest in science as many scientific breakthroughs have been made by women.

  • @RainaRamsay
    @RainaRamsay 10 лет назад +8

    So you just persuaded everyone in Australia that the seasons _are_ caused by the elliptical orbit of the Earth....

    • @badastronomy
      @badastronomy 10 лет назад +26

      Yeah, that's always a risk. :) Oddly, the temperatures there aren't that much affected by it, since the southern hemisphere is mostly water. I wanted to include that in this episode, but there just wasn't time!

    • @Cami96
      @Cami96 10 лет назад +4

      Don't forget South America; it took some concentration not to get lost when you were talking about seasons.

    • @scharfy
      @scharfy 10 лет назад +1

      *****
      Yeah, I notice the always talking about Polaris and northern hemisphere stars too. Will we get our own episode or something?

    • @Legendaryknight2
      @Legendaryknight2 10 лет назад +1

      ***** Since we're still on the basics, can you take a time to talk about how we perceive the stars in different hemispheres?

    • @RainaRamsay
      @RainaRamsay 10 лет назад +1

      ***** Well that's fair enough. I certainly have struggled with trying to fit all the content I want into a 10-minute video, so I understand. :)

  • @Stok3dgaming
    @Stok3dgaming 10 лет назад +2

    Subtle yugioh reference, I love you crash course

  • @gouldmears2071
    @gouldmears2071 10 лет назад +4

    I don't dislike this series, but I feel it is aimed at a lower level than the other crash courses. Like this is for early high school students instead of college students. As someone who has watched all of the other videos in the series this seems like a bit of a let down for such a cool topic.

    • @Thrall079
      @Thrall079 10 лет назад +5

      Meh he's laying out the basics as of now, I'm sure it will get more in depth

    • @DudokX
      @DudokX 10 лет назад +2

      Maybe you just know more about Astronomy than other crash course topics so it looks too "basic" for you.

    • @inkidoo54
      @inkidoo54 10 лет назад

      Agree, it felt a little like primary school for a moment. But when he explained the summer and the winter, what I didn't know about that, is that summer was farther away than winter from the sun. So... I might have needed the basics refresh! Haha

    • @silpae
      @silpae 10 лет назад +5

      I think it is more of an intro to astronomy. You can't just jump right into a topic like astronomy and expect everyone to understand what you're talking about. In fact, you can't do this with any science. If you look at Crash Course history though, you can't introduce someone to history because unless you went to a highly censored school or you never went to school, you know the basics already.
      What you know is not what everyone knows. If you like Astronomy, obviously you know this already but someone who has never learned anything about it ( and in school they barely cover astronomy) would need those basic informations to get into the topic.

  • @Mind_flayer95
    @Mind_flayer95 4 года назад +1

    Whenever I’m at the countryside and it’s not cloudy i take time to go out and look at the sky it’s an incredible thing to do wondering which star is it and how far is it how big it is than our sun is mind blowing

  • @Aziraphale686
    @Aziraphale686 9 лет назад +16

    Astrology is silly.... Understatement of the year

  • @randomfamilyvideos2728
    @randomfamilyvideos2728 Год назад +1

    Excellent series. However, I was hoping for a guide to how to locate things in the night sky: What are the brightest stars; how to identify the constellations; "arc to Arcturus" and such. The series seems to assume people already know all of that. I'll have to look elsewhere for a "guide to the night sky." I have a telescope that you calibrate by pointing it at three stars. I'm trying to learn my way around the sky enough to find them. (Plus I'm in the city where there aren't many to choose from...)

  • @lionheart9693
    @lionheart9693 7 лет назад +8

    It's amazing that so many people DON'T know why we have seasons. LOL

  • @christiaankruger5299
    @christiaankruger5299 7 лет назад +1

    Thanks guys. Absolutely love these videos. I'm no astronaut, but I love astronomy.

  • @danishzeb9864
    @danishzeb9864 8 лет назад +14

    Any body else who watches this and then forgets everything the guy said after 10 seconds?

  • @huihwang52
    @huihwang52 3 месяца назад

    Really great content and delivery! More!!!!

  • @somebody5126
    @somebody5126 6 лет назад +5

    Allah said,
    الشَّمْسُ وَالْقَمَرُ بِحُسْبَانٍ ﴿٥﴾
    The sun and the moon (run) on fixed courses.
    They move in their orbit in perfect succession, according to precise calculation that is never delayed nor disturbed,
    لاَ الشَّمْسُ يَنبَغِى لَهَآ أَن تدْرِكَ القَمَرَ وَلاَ الَّيْلُ سَابِقُ النَّهَارِ وَكُلٌّ فِى فَلَكٍ يَسْبَحُونَ
    It is not for the sun to overtake the moon, nor does the night outstrip the day. They all float, each in an orbit. (36:40),
    فَالِقُ الإِصْبَاحِ وَجَعَلَ الَّيْلَ سَكَناً وَالشَّمْسَ وَالْقَمَرَ حُسْبَاناً ذَلِكَ تَقْدِيرُ الْعَزِيزِ الْعَلِيمِ
    (He is the) Cleaver of the daybreak. He has appointed the night for resting, and the sun and the moon for calculating. Such is the measuring of the Almighty, the All-Knowing. (6:96),
    Thank god of the bless of being muslimah

    • @CD-123
      @CD-123 4 года назад +1

      Allah also said sun sets on pool of muddy water 🤣🤣🤣🤣
      I have never seen someone so proud of being stupid and dumb 🤣🤣🤣🤣😐😞

    • @rolandcaters7258
      @rolandcaters7258 4 года назад +1

      some body dude, I’m not taking the word of a couple religious pilgrims over 1 million separate observations of the greatest scientists there are. If you find some kind of proof, go collect your Nobel prize

  • @ZetaFuzzMachine
    @ZetaFuzzMachine 10 лет назад

    YES! You can't belive how satisfying it is to see the Sun-Earth cartoon with an excentric elipse orbit. KEEP UP THE GOOD JOB, THOUGHT CAFE!

  • @chrispatry381
    @chrispatry381 10 лет назад +3

    "The universe belongs to everyone". In my opinion, the universe belongs to everything, not only life ;)

  • @Άγγελος-β8δ
    @Άγγελος-β8δ 5 лет назад +2

    3:33 what's cool about being greek is that I don't even consider this a fan fact, in fact this along with milllions of other words have a special meaning as well that only natives understand

  • @adldesigner
    @adldesigner 10 лет назад +7

    I love how the video riles up astrologers with the precession comment. And yeah, it doesn't take precession into account. Nor the actual position of the sun at birth. I would be an Aries instead of a Taurus if it was so.
    Keep up the good work! Nice crash course. I also wish I could see more stars at night. #nomorelightpollution

  • @quirkemovez
    @quirkemovez 10 лет назад +1

    This episode made me dust off my old telescope my uncle gave me and look at the astonishing, true beauty of the night sky, thanks Phil.

  • @RapiBurrito
    @RapiBurrito 9 лет назад +21

    I love how he is polite and says: "Astrology is silly" when he should just yell: ASTROLOGY IS BULLSHIT!!!!!!111!! *tips fedora*

    • @lindseyykaitlin
      @lindseyykaitlin 4 года назад +3

      RapiBurrito I don’t understand why you feel the need to be a jerk. No one cares if you don’t believe in astrology and you shouldn’t care if people believe something that you don’t. We learned to respect others in kindergarten

    • @RapiBurrito
      @RapiBurrito 4 года назад +2

      @@lindseyykaitlin well you seem to care, that's just about enough to make the comment worth it ;)

  • @Daigotsumax
    @Daigotsumax 9 лет назад +1

    That man's voice is so smooth and calm. He must tell the best bedtime stories

  • @supernova3930
    @supernova3930 8 лет назад +3

    Can't wait to go to college in the physics &a astrology department but that is not till 2021...

  • @DaddyMunro1
    @DaddyMunro1 9 лет назад

    I enjoyed Crash Course World History while studying at Khan Academy (wait for it... The Mongols!) for my GED and now my Astronomy class sent me here! I really like your style.

  • @kimberlylatrice1981
    @kimberlylatrice1981 5 лет назад +22

    "That's why Astrology is silly." 😔😔😔 SIGH. 😢

  • @tyrantsfaceisred
    @tyrantsfaceisred 10 лет назад

    5:30 - 5:38 sounds like they forgot or didn't use the take of this line from the studio and recorded it on a mac built in input later. not a big deal at all, just something i caught. This is my favorite installment of Crash Course thus far. Keep it up!!!

  • @TheFindingLight
    @TheFindingLight 10 лет назад +14

    not that i want to in any way start this argument, but astrology does take into account precession. Birth year, day, and time take into account where the sun, moon, and all the planets are located, so it's not based on positions from ancient times. Ok that's all :)

    • @TheFindingLight
      @TheFindingLight 10 лет назад

      lol...

    • @VCheesey
      @VCheesey 10 лет назад +39

      Which was his point; It's inconsistent (to name one of the numerous problems with astrology).

    • @c87_archive
      @c87_archive 10 лет назад +38

      Even if it does, it's still utter nonsense.

    • @TheFindingLight
      @TheFindingLight 10 лет назад +8

      well that's besides the point. im making nary an argument for either side. just pointing out a factor that is accounted for where in this video was questioned :) tis all.

    • @chicoarraes
      @chicoarraes 10 лет назад

      of course astrology takes it into account. in fact, that´s an argument that goes back thousands of years, between so called tropical and sidereal astrology. but never-mind that, let´s dismiss precious human knowledge as silly.

  • @griffinmccue6189
    @griffinmccue6189 4 года назад +2

    5:46 Christmas dinner on the beach, mate?🇦🇺

  • @Zmunk19
    @Zmunk19 10 лет назад +9

    is it a coincidence that our solar system is flat?

    • @Zerepzerreitug
      @Zerepzerreitug 10 лет назад +49

      for what I understand, it would actually be really strange if it wasn't. Due the conservation of angular momentum, any spherical gas cloud tends to collapse into a flat disk. This is why many galaxies are spiral and "flat".
      Also, due to the gravity interaction between planets, they tend to correct one another's orbits and keep them all roughly in the same place. The big moons of Jupiter for instance are locked in a synchronized dance where each moon circles Jupiter a multiple of times the previous moon does. Kepler even thought this "resonance" phenomenon between planets had some kind of spooky relationship to the Platonic solids, and in (unsuccessfully) trying to prove it he stumbled with Kepler's Laws for orbital motion!

    • @dkSilo
      @dkSilo 10 лет назад +3

      There is a physical reason. I can't explain it very good, but the solar system was formed from loose mass floating about. Because of this mass rotation, it flattened out (like if you have a blob of stuff on a plate and rotate the plate, the stuff will try to get to the corners making the former blob more disk like).
      Don't ask me why this thing is rotating in the first place :D

    • @luisoncpp
      @luisoncpp 10 лет назад +1

      Actually that's too improbable to be a coincidence, I heard some time ago that some people thinks that another star passed near from the sun and pulled out small parts from the sun that later cooled down and became the solar system.
      When I heard that thing for the first time, I thought that it souls too arbitrary to be true, but after seeing that all the solar system is in the same planet, that explanation has much more sense.

    • @Zerepzerreitug
      @Zerepzerreitug 10 лет назад +9

      dkSilo it's actually not that difficult to understand. _All_ objects have a certain amount of "angular momentum", which keeps constant throughout the entire existence of the object as long as it doesn't gains or looses mass.
      So our solar system started as you say, from a loose mass of gas floating around. The gas began to collapse due to its gravity, like a balloon loosing its air, and as it did, its radius diminished rapidly, which according to the conservation of angular momentum, meant that its rotational speed, however tiny or minuscule it was in the beginning, also began to increase.
      This is exactly what happens with the famous example of an ice skater spinning with her arms extended and then retracting them towards her body, speeding up. The original gas cloud doesn't needs to have a significant rotation. Once it begins shrinking it will inevitably start spinning faster and faster :)

    • @Zerepzerreitug
      @Zerepzerreitug 10 лет назад +9

      luis enrique vargas azcona I think that what you read was about a competing scientific theory for planet formation that was debated at the same time than the current (and so far confirmed) "nebular hypothesis" which states that the sun and planets all formed from a same spinning gas cloud.
      For many years it was unclear if the nebular hypothesis or the star-ripping one you say were the correct ones. But thanks to our observations of proto-stars and young solar systems we're already quite sure that another star "ripping" the planets off the sun is not how solar systems are made :)
      And what's really interesting is that there were (and still are), *many* more hypotheses trying to explain it:
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Solar_System_formation_and_evolution_hypotheses

  • @VandrefalkTV
    @VandrefalkTV 10 лет назад

    Cannot get enough of these channels and videos- more, moar, more!

  • @MKiravell
    @MKiravell 8 лет назад +14

    Actually Vedic astrology takes precession into account. That's why it is accurate by someone who is well versed in it as opposed to Western astrology which doesn't take the wobble into account. Folks who don't do their homework and dismiss the rest of the world as well as the ancient sciences are the ones who are missing out...and that's what we Indian folk call karma!

    • @Evergreen1342
      @Evergreen1342 8 лет назад +1

      truth!

    • @dentoncrimescene
      @dentoncrimescene 8 лет назад +14

      Well, present your evidence in a clear and concise manor and have it reviewed. Any truth in it will be plain for all to see.

    • @MistiClectiCisM
      @MistiClectiCisM 8 лет назад +4

      No. Just do your homework instead of following the mainstream scientific consensus. I repeat: just do your homework. Astrology has been around for a lot longer than the new official religion of science over metaphysics and everything else. I could go on for so long but unless you gave the slightest sign of doing your homework, why bother. Mainstream is mainstream !

    • @dentoncrimescene
      @dentoncrimescene 8 лет назад +15

      Touched a nerve there. I am not the one with extradinary claims. Science is not a religion, it is concerned with proving or disproving hypothesis. The burden of truth is on you, friend to prove what you are saying. I have seen no proof that you can make predictions or decisions based on any kind of astrology. I read a little about it and can see no basis to believe any of it.

    • @tanmaysinha8138
      @tanmaysinha8138 8 лет назад +8

      +Esteban Steven .Goode Hill There is a reason why it is mainstream- it is the best explanation we could come up with. It agrees with all observations, plus allows us to make accurate predictions.
      Just because it has been around for a long time does not mean it is correct. I say this as a person who once believed such things, but now do not.

  • @laurapeterson5158
    @laurapeterson5158 10 лет назад

    Fantastic episode! You're a great host, Phil, and I'm loving the series so far!

  • @robertbenyi
    @robertbenyi 10 лет назад +10

    90% of this is common knowledge, I feel like a 5 year old watching these videos

    • @silpae
      @silpae 10 лет назад +42

      It is not "common knowledge" since not everyone knows it. Only people who are into astronomy, like you (I guess) and I know this very well. However, many others are just "discovering" astronomy and never really looked into it. Did you know 55% (I don't know when that survey was made) of Americans do not know the Earth rotates around the Sun? That's because astronomy is not a topic widely discussed in school (among many others) so no one really cares (not their fault). So someone might be utterly mindblown by this, so please respect that.
      Many other science channels are very exclusive because you need to know the basics to understand what they're saying, which not everyone does. So to have a channel giving out the "101s" is great! More people will get into astronomy, which I am personally very excited about as it does not seem to be popular with the general population.

    • @whiteflagstoo
      @whiteflagstoo 10 лет назад +8

      I personally have learned quite a bit already.

    • @donutworry9605
      @donutworry9605 10 лет назад +13

      This is an intro course. If you are beyond this, watch something that goes deeper into these topics. Don't disparage the videos for providing this information to people who haven't received it yet, however. That is awfully short-sighted.

    • @krombopulos_michael
      @krombopulos_michael 10 лет назад

      Yeah a lot of it is the kind of stuff everyone learns in school but at the same time, you have to remember that this is probably watched by a lot of kids who haven't learned this yet so it's trying to be accessible in the early episodes.

    • @doraaaa0613
      @doraaaa0613 9 лет назад +4

      You have no reason to act above it all. Good for you that you all of this, but surprisingly enough it might not be the same for a lot of people. If you are unsatisfied, find something that is more suitable for you. Their aim is to educate people, I'd rather not see arrogant people like you trying to make it seem like all the hard work they put into this (to provide you with education free of cost) is in vain. Thank you very much and have a good day.

  • @pannenkoekmetstroop
    @pannenkoekmetstroop 9 лет назад

    Love these series. Kinda hard to follow for me as a non-native english speaker because Phil speaks SO FAST without any breath pauses haha but still so fascinating to watch.

  • @GhostRider-xz5he
    @GhostRider-xz5he 7 лет назад +3

    i need a girlfriend to share the beauty of the universe together ...

  • @arjunkrishna2703
    @arjunkrishna2703 6 лет назад

    probably the best youtube tutorial channnel

  • @ganeshk4133
    @ganeshk4133 10 лет назад +2

    Earth is rotating east to west @4:30. I think it is supposed to move other way around.

  • @mironsk8
    @mironsk8 6 лет назад

    „The Universe belongs to all!”...so beautiful.

  • @doctorshuckle8394
    @doctorshuckle8394 10 лет назад

    This is amazing, sure I knew this already, but now I can explain it more simply. This is perfect background dialogue.

  • @peterdorey
    @peterdorey 10 лет назад

    It's a great start for beginners, if everyone could go and look at 'The Sky At Night' just maybe they'd be less violence in the world and more appreciation for the beautiful Universe we are in within are actually are people!! You are The Eyes of the World!

  • @thatwierdkid.
    @thatwierdkid. 6 лет назад +1

    Exactly...
    Few months ago...there was a group of stars, I was continually watching it everyday!! After some weeks when I was returning from my tuition I had seen that it's over my head... I mean I rises from the east side to over my head... And just as you have said... After a month...it's kinda setting at the west side..
    And now there is no sign of that group is stars!!

  • @ronniefromOR
    @ronniefromOR 10 лет назад

    These are great so far.. keep it up!

  • @DustynDragonwolf
    @DustynDragonwolf 10 лет назад +1

    Both brilliant and handsome. I don't know what I love more; the complexity/beauty of the Universe or Phil...

  • @vivsrg
    @vivsrg 10 лет назад

    This series is fascinating! I can't wait for the next episode