For some reason videos from you make me cry - not out of sadness, but the beauty of the unknown. The space is fascinating but that's not why I cry during these videos. It's the thought that the more we look at space, the more it starts looking like a cell system in our bodies... perhaps we truly are some sort of small bacteria, cells, unaware of the bigger creation we helped to make. Something we may never truly understand. Eternity itself.
25,000 mph if you were launched from the surface with no additional propellant. You do not need to be traveling that fast to leave, as long as you have fuel and a power source.
You don't. You can jump can't you? You can throw a ball upward right? You just have to have the energy to keep going. Speed has nothing to do with it...
If the universe is 14 billion years old, it would *only* take 444 years, give or take a few months, to exist the universe in its present state. Pack a lunch.
Not to mention the universe is constantly expanding at a speed many times faster than light, so even if you were to reach the horizon of the observable universe, by the time you get there the universe would have expanded beyond that point. Its like the rabbit and the tortoise but the tortoise never wins, and is dammed to never win.
@cheesypotat0es The "speed" of light is instantaneous in its own frame of reference, because the paroxysmal relativistic effect produced by the nature of a photon means that the entire space-time of the universe is contracted to a singular point/singularity of dimension 0. As a result, a photon/light experiences neither distance nor duration, and all possible positions and instants in the universe are united in a single position-instant eternally present. So there is no speed of light intrinsically, but rather instantaneity, singularity of the whole universe in 1 point and eternity of light. That’s special relativity buddy 😅
And here's something just as mind boggling: at the smallest scales things are just as far apart from each other. If you were the size of a molecule and standing on the surface of an apple, it'd take you dozens of years to walk it's circumference. Us humans are actually around the level of scale where we're halfway between the smallest particles and the observable universe.
5:36 Thats what I like to think the Multiverse looks like. I imagine if you were somehow floating in the space between universes, they'd look very similar to stars. And similar to star clusters, I also imagine there being universe clusters. Those would probably be universes that are incredibly similar to each other.
And then that begs the question. If all these multiverses exist in one space, then what do they collectively make up? The universe is the name we give to the space that contains all matter we know of. I like to wonder if the multiverse is similar. All different multiverses residing in an even bigger universal bubble. And then what would be outside of that? It’s like an infinite progression that never stops getting bigger
Maybe beyond the universe is just literally nothing and I mean like it's either an universe or a multiverse floating in an empty vacuum, nothing else, the vacuum is also infinite but literally nothing is here except for universe/multiverse.
Wow, so all those movies where the camera pans out of earth and into the vastness of space, the camera guy was moving 100-1,000 light years PER SECOND. What a legend.
Getting sick of these stupid cameraman jokes. At some point within the next 20 years you will have to come up with something else. Seriously, I'm not the only one who finds this overused played out meme annoying.
@@MadDoodles You and others can't hack it as people with original thoughts. You have zero ability to understand that once you start getting likes from other stupid people, it justifies your continuous and repeated reason to continue with that joke.
@@dbsti3006lol, I thought that might get a rise from you, you know you can just ignore comments right? Getting pompous and pissy about it just spurs people into making more. 😉
@@tylerpiret2712i mean yea there probably are other universes but more likely then not they arent parallel universes and are super super super far away from eachother
@@wuphatlizar2541 Nobody mentioned parallel universes here, only other universes. And "probably" unlikely also implies that it's "probably" likely so we need to be more accurate when speaking of science. Also probabilities are useless when it comes to what's outside our universe since the rules outside may be conpletely different, thus our calculation of probabilities may have nothing to do with theirs.
Yeah imagine our solar system is just an atom , and earth is an electron , and the entire universe is just something made of those atoms , i mean if we can make ourselves as small as atoms and live on them , it would still feels like exactly as our universe , shit is wiere XD
@@alaa341gimagine it's a giant brain of a new born who's still in the development. We also can be the ATP, that's why black holes devour so much energy being at the center of every galaxy.
@@theintrovertguy4337 Definitely a coincidence. Every large object in space has an escape velocity if you wanted to leave its surface, which is dependant on mass, not circumference.
It's not even that close a coincidence. They're not actually the same number. Earth's circumference is *40,075* km and its escape velocity is *40,270* km/h. The choice of km per *HOUR* is also totally arbitrary. The escape velocity is also 11.2 km/s, which is roughly 1/3,600th of 40,075 km - which is about as relevant as choosing km/h instead of km/s :P
@@realvoidbla4881 I don't really think that's what he meant. I think he meant would be a better representation of the speed if we can see how it looked if you were still on Earth.
this was hard to follow, he should have started at one point on earth and accelerated away from it for each example. You can't grasp each move in this example.
Agreed. I'd like to just see something passing by. Accelerating from the surface of the earth to outside the galaxy once it got to the millions beyond would've been perfect.
0:24 in and it would've been nice to have more background features to get a real feel for the speed. There's like no texture or anything so it's hard to visually perceive it.
@@SyDatNguyen-r4jI think he means the speed of shadows? Anyways, shadows don't carry any information, and as such are one of the only things that can "travel" faster than the speed of light
What amazes me the most, that this is probably the best way to get me the idea on how vast the universe is. Having these number 1 ly/sec 100 ly/sec combined with these speeds is really blowing my mind. Thanks so much for this visualization. And in between all this emptyness where are just one pale blue dot, with humans fighting for some ressources that we have to share, no matter what.
the only "mistake" in this video is what actually we would see once approaching the light speed, which would be starting to see things in red, gradually to blue, then completely white and then black as light has "no time" to touch any sensors in the eyes.
What is seen in this video is much more like what you'd experience if you were travelling very close to the speed of light due to time-dilation. As you get closer to the speed limit, your apparent speed through space would appear to increase well beyond the speed of light, and what you would see would look similar to what you see in this video. What's actually happening is as your time slows down, you experience this as the rest of the universe speeding up, including the motion of all the stars, and your motion between them.
Hey Stargaze, Don't know if you'll ever read this but ive started watching your vids in 2020 or 21 and I instantly fell inlove with your channel I was getting into astronomy and you took a big part of adding into it, Even if I wasn't as much as interested before I still visit your channel from time to time to watch your videos again just to appreciate the universe overall and remember about how beautiful this is Love your vids and keep up the good work ❤❤🎉
Wow, you've been around almost since the beginning! Thank you so much, I love reading comments like this. I'll keep working hard so there’s always something interesting for when you come back!!
@@Stargaze_youtube Wow! Thank you for replying!!! You've shifted my interests and dreams because of your space videos (I was only 10 at the time), I've gotten into The History of Our World and Maybe Our Universe, Maybe in the future I would love to contribute into discovering more If there still is left to do so, Everything in space is truly fascinating.
We really won’t be though, sure the nearest star is very far away but give humans a couple hundred years and if we don’t kill ourself by then we should be able to make it somewhere.
Even travelling at a million lightyears a second, you still feel like you're glacially drifting among an endless sea of galaxies. Space is utterly humbling.
Although, in one hour, you would have traveled 3.6 billion light years. In less than a day, you’d reach the edge of the observable universe. Or at least what we believe it to be.
Just crazy how massive the universe is. The nearest galaxy to our own is travelling at 250,000mph towards us, and it’s still going to take 4.5 billion years to reach us. Then just take into account it’s our neighbour, and there are millions of galaxies, that are thousands of times further away than andromeda is… we are minuscule. Any person who truly believes we are the only life in the universe are truly mad. It’s guttering that we will never ever know, and never meet life outside of earth.
Technically if you as an observer were able to travel the speed of light across the galaxy it would take no time at all for you, it would be instantaneous. To an outside observer it would seem as if it took you 100,000 years.
As much as i love space and astronomy, something about that last shot, with all the other ‘universes’ lined up together unnerved me. For some reason i can see it ‘mathematically possible’ for them to be ordered in some way, but the idea of a ‘cosmic grid’ is something truly beyond scale
That last shot was the CMB. It's the radiation left by the Big Bang. That's not the same as other 'universes'. We have no idea if there is a multiverse. For now, all we know is that we have only one universe, we have only one Milky Way Galaxy, we have only one Sun and, obviously, we have only one small blue spot in the vast universe.... I wish that more people would realize that and that they stop making and raging wars....
The numbers are cute. But the lack of reference makes the speed look unimpressive compared to the numbers. I would rather have an example of the speed in urban area where you can really tell the difference.
You can as the observer travel faster than 300,000km/s. But the universe around you would be aging faster. You can keep accelerating forever but the time dilation around you would also keep speeding up so other observers wouldn't see you traveling faster than light relatively.
It might very well be possible there are multiple universes. The Milky Way was supposedly the entire known universe until Edwin Hubble discovered otherwise.
You believe in bubble universes! That amazing to see! That's why I've been a long subscriber of yours. Youre amazing, thank you so much for al these videos !
Well, I wouldn't be surprised if that were the case! I don't know how we could ever have evidence or counter-evidence for this, but still, I think it's more likely than not. Glad you like the content, ty!!
So in theory, to be faster than the speed of light. Which is relatively slow in comparison to the universe. The Object traveling would have to be mass-less? So for humans or anything physical to beat the speed of light it would require it to essentially no longer exist. There is an experiment using light that determines I'd something is being looked at, the particles are unstable and fluctuating until it is observed in physical space before it becomes stable. So we would essentially need to harness the power of being unobserved to travel past the speed of light. Sounds like my sex life.
nothing can stop space itself from traveling faster than light. nothing can travel faster than _through_ space faster than light, but nothing prohibits space from doing that. it’s why the universe expands faster than light
FTL is so overrated and unnecessary. Why? See this repost of my other comment here: FUN FACT: the closer you travel to the speed of light, the quicker time appears to pass for you (because it's actually slowing down due to time dilation). This means if you travel really close to the speed of light, you can travel so quickly that from your perspective it appears as though you are travelling faster than the speed of light - so it would look just as it does in this video. And this means within a single human lifespan people could actually make enourmous journeys across our galaxy, and even between galaxies, if they can harness enough energy to travel at relativistic speeds (close to the speed of light). FUN FACT 2: A person could travel 27,000 light-years to the Sagittarius A* supermassive blackhole at the centre of the Milkyway in what would feel like 1 year of journey time ("proper time" as experienced by the observer) if they could travel at 99.99999993% the speed of light. FUN FACT 3: To accelerate a vehicle the same mass as the International Space Station (420,000kg) to this speed would require as much energy as the Sun emits in 2.64 seconds. Using a Dyson Swarm to redirect just 0.01% of the Sun's total energy output, you could accelerate a vehicle of this mass to that speed in just 7.33 hours. FUN FACT 4: After just 1 year of apparent journey time for these voyagers, 27,000 years would have passed back on Earth, and they would now be arriving at the centre of the Mikyway. And if they didn't slow down and passed straight by, within about 2 years more travel time they would be leaving the other side of the Milkyway. And at this speed, it would take them just over 93 years of additional travel time to reach the Andromeda galaxy, 2.5 million years of Earth time later (if they were travelling in the right direction to begin with). So with a network of Dyson Swarms, an advanced space-faring civilisation could build vast interstellar and intergalatic transportation networks offering passengers apparently-faster-than-light travel (so long as they don't mind returning home after however much 'real' time has actually passed).
@@ДАРТАНЬЯН-з2щ from what I understand they require negative energy, and this may not be physically possible and/or technically feasible. It would be great if possible, but seems speculative. My bet is it isn't possible, and that's how the universe doesn't need to deal with FTL paradoxes. Plus, the mechanism I describe for Near-Lightspeed-Travel is completely non-speculative and requires no exotic technology.
Light speed in Vacuum in miles is 671million miles per hour. Now, for the fictional speeds; At 4:37 you're traveling as fast as The Silver Surfer's minimum galactic speed. At 4:55, you're traveling as fast as SS's maximum intergalactic speed. At 5:13, you're traveling Sentry's maximum travel speed in space. At 5:23, you're basically Beyonder level and above.
What always confuses me about space is like are there directions like north south east west, or is there just relative proximity? When we are moving further and further away from earth what direction are we going towards, are there other directions we can go? From what perspective is the image of the universe taken from?
In space, directions like north, south, east, and west lose their meaning because they are based on Earth's magnetic poles. Instead, directions in space are relative to specific reference points, such as the Sun or the center of the galaxy. Movement in space is multidirectional and depends on the chosen reference system. The image of the universe is constructed from various observations made by telescopes, and since the universe has no central point, there is no single perspective.
it's quite frustrating that the universe is the size that it is and yet still expanding. there's so much stuff out there that we'll most likely never even know about, let alone be able to see. just traveling within the solar system would be a monumental achievement for future humans
it’s crazy because the pure chance that earth and it’s perfect conditions exist, therefore we can exist, makes me feel like there is a god; but then knowing the rest of the universe exists and because of its vastness and size makes me also believe there isn’t a god bc why would he care about little ole us? we aren’t significant in the grand scheme of things… i can’t explain it but it’s like both hopeful optimism & beauty looking inward, and dreadful nihilism and emptiness looking outward, all at the same time lol.
There's countless of other Earth like planets out there for sure, very possibly supporting life. As a species it just so happens we were born on this one. Someone or something else out there could be saying the same thing about their homeworld.
If you consider relavistic effects, then length contraction and time dilation will occur. This means the universe will contracts along your direction of motion and your time will slow down. This means at light speed, the trip would becomes instantaneous
I think the scientist already invented the Light speed engine which faster than the light a lot, but the problem is causing the human particles separated which means evaporation
I got a theory, that outside our universe, there is other universes. And inside the other universes combined with ours, there will be another one covering all them. And then i just continues like that. The universe is a big mystery, i never think an astronomer or other scientist will ever be able to tell us the truth. The best thing right now, is to have theories that can make us wonder if it's true or not. A theory doesn't have any limits. The only limit, is that it can give us big questions of our life.
Actually in physics it can be possible to have a speed faster than light according to quantum physics if we have two particles one of them in upper direction other one immediately change the direction will be downward in case both particle in quantum entanglement . So if the distance between these two particles are 100 light years the speed of this change it's (100 light years /0 seconds )
light only appears to have a speed when in reality it's already reached every possible destination all at once because time is a construct of consciousness
It doesn’t help much to illustrate speed moving: 1) ..past large blurry hills when we have no idea of the relative size of the hills 2) ..so far away from Earth, moving away slowly, with nothing passing by Maybe the last half of the video improved. ?
For some reason videos from you make me cry - not out of sadness, but the beauty of the unknown. The space is fascinating but that's not why I cry during these videos. It's the thought that the more we look at space, the more it starts looking like a cell system in our bodies... perhaps we truly are some sort of small bacteria, cells, unaware of the bigger creation we helped to make. Something we may never truly understand. Eternity itself.
Great comment. I could connect to your thoughts through the vast spaces of the infinity for eternity.
Same. I sometimes break i to crying after watching these. But it feels good. Can't explain it
It is the feeling of being humbled by a non jugemental universal spirit.@@ahsanrahib9958
Try Space Engine. It's a universe sand box where you can basically do what is happening in this video. Most of the known universe is modelled
You crying because your soul feels the wonder of God
The Earth's escape velocity is so interesting, I didn't know you needed 25,000mph to be able to get out of the gravitational pull
25,000 mph if you were launched from the surface with no additional propellant. You do not need to be traveling that fast to leave, as long as you have fuel and a power source.
You don't. You can jump can't you? You can throw a ball upward right? You just have to have the energy to keep going. Speed has nothing to do with it...
Just slingshot man.
@@Nomadmandude You wrote interestingly man!! But then why did they mentioned such higher speed???
Now look at the escape velocity of a neutron star
1:26 "Falling into Earth", but reversed!
That's how we got into space with our indestructible suit
Even travelling at 1 light year a second, you would still never reach the event horizon of the observable universe that is mind boggling
If the universe is 14 billion years old, it would *only* take 444 years, give or take a few months, to exist the universe in its present state.
Pack a lunch.
@@derekburge5294 it would take much longer, the event horizon is about 45 billion light years away from us. Universe has expanded quite a bit.
Not to mention the universe is constantly expanding at a speed many times faster than light, so even if you were to reach the horizon of the observable universe, by the time you get there the universe would have expanded beyond that point. Its like the rabbit and the tortoise but the tortoise never wins, and is dammed to never win.
@@Just_A_Guy_Here.Lol
@cheesypotat0es The "speed" of light is instantaneous in its own frame of reference, because the paroxysmal relativistic effect produced by the nature of a photon means that the entire space-time of the universe is contracted to a singular point/singularity of dimension 0. As a result, a photon/light experiences neither distance nor duration, and all possible positions and instants in the universe are united in a single position-instant eternally present. So there is no speed
of light intrinsically, but rather instantaneity, singularity of the whole universe in 1 point and eternity of light. That’s special relativity buddy 😅
And here's something just as mind boggling: at the smallest scales things are just as far apart from each other. If you were the size of a molecule and standing on the surface of an apple, it'd take you dozens of years to walk it's circumference.
Us humans are actually around the level of scale where we're halfway between the smallest particles and the observable universe.
5:36 Thats what I like to think the Multiverse looks like. I imagine if you were somehow floating in the space between universes, they'd look very similar to stars. And similar to star clusters, I also imagine there being universe clusters. Those would probably be universes that are incredibly similar to each other.
ok
And then that begs the question. If all these multiverses exist in one space, then what do they collectively make up? The universe is the name we give to the space that contains all matter we know of. I like to wonder if the multiverse is similar. All different multiverses residing in an even bigger universal bubble. And then what would be outside of that? It’s like an infinite progression that never stops getting bigger
Maybe beyond the universe is just literally nothing and I mean like it's either an universe or a multiverse floating in an empty vacuum, nothing else, the vacuum is also infinite but literally nothing is here except for universe/multiverse.
@@gneu1527 The statement "nothing is infinite' is true in more ways than one it seems
To quote Sonic The Hedgehog: "One simply must move briskly".
I believe the actual quote is “it is of utmost importance that one must exert one’s self to a greater speed than is usually achieved.”
"nyoom now"
- sonc the edging hog
That's correct man 😊
There is a necessity to proceed with utmost velocity
Wow, so all those movies where the camera pans out of earth and into the vastness of space, the camera guy was moving 100-1,000 light years PER SECOND.
What a legend.
The beginning of Contact, is a prime example of exactly this.
Getting sick of these stupid cameraman jokes. At some point within the next 20 years you will have to come up with something else. Seriously, I'm not the only one who finds this overused played out meme annoying.
@@dbsti3006Couldn’t hack it as a cameraman eh?
@@MadDoodles You and others can't hack it as people with original thoughts. You have zero ability to understand that once you start getting likes from other stupid people, it justifies your continuous and repeated reason to continue with that joke.
@@dbsti3006lol, I thought that might get a rise from you, you know you can just ignore comments right? Getting pompous and pissy about it just spurs people into making more. 😉
5:36 imagine if this was just a tiny universe and others are there...
Honestly I’m starting to believe it’s more and more likely.
@@tylerpiret2712its probably very unlikely
@@tylerpiret2712i mean yea there probably are other universes but more likely then not they arent parallel universes and are super super super far away from eachother
@@wuphatlizar2541 Nobody mentioned parallel universes here, only other universes. And "probably" unlikely also implies that it's "probably" likely so we need to be more accurate when speaking of science. Also probabilities are useless when it comes to what's outside our universe since the rules outside may be conpletely different, thus our calculation of probabilities may have nothing to do with theirs.
@@HaloDenRAth yes they did right? deleted his comment
imagine at the end there, there are other universes, but when we go back, their like atoms, making up a new universe all over again
Yeah imagine our solar system is just an atom , and earth is an electron , and the entire universe is just something made of those atoms , i mean if we can make ourselves as small as atoms and live on them , it would still feels like exactly as our universe , shit is wiere XD
@@alaa341gimagine it's a giant brain of a new born who's still in the development. We also can be the ATP, that's why black holes devour so much energy being at the center of every galaxy.
May be the truth: in the smallest there is the biggest
The simpons did an intro like that lol
Universe is fractal in fact everything is fractal,everything repeats itself just on a different scales,so why think that our universe is only one?
What a coicidence: 40.000 km/h Earth's escape velocity, 40.000 km circle around the Earth
Haha
Coincidence? I don't think so.
@@theintrovertguy4337 Definitely a coincidence. Every large object in space has an escape velocity if you wanted to leave its surface, which is dependant on mass, not circumference.
It's not even that close a coincidence. They're not actually the same number. Earth's circumference is *40,075* km and its escape velocity is *40,270* km/h. The choice of km per *HOUR* is also totally arbitrary. The escape velocity is also 11.2 km/s, which is roughly 1/3,600th of 40,075 km - which is about as relevant as choosing km/h instead of km/s :P
@@af.tatchell Pinokio aleluja desert youshimitsu 3
I'd love to see a speed comparison video where it's all done on a flat terrain. At least for the speeds of human-made objects.
earth isnt flat, its round
@@realvoidbla4881 It's an oblate spheroid.
@@realvoidbla4881 I don't really think that's what he meant. I think he meant would be a better representation of the speed if we can see how it looked if you were still on Earth.
Yeah, no point in doing something you can't compare with.
@@realvoidbla4881 He didnt say the earth was flat, he said a flat surface
this was hard to follow, he should have started at one point on earth and accelerated away from it for each example. You can't grasp each move in this example.
Agreed. I'd like to just see something passing by. Accelerating from the surface of the earth to outside the galaxy once it got to the millions beyond would've been perfect.
@@anomaly395 yup!
Exactly, there is no visible difference between ecape velocity and speed of light, both looks the same in this graphics
One of my favorite RUclips channels! Keep going Stargaze, and thank you for so much fun exploration.
Thank you. A lot more content coming up!!
0:24 in and it would've been nice to have more background features to get a real feel for the speed. There's like no texture or anything so it's hard to visually perceive it.
"Nothing is faster than the speed of light"
*Speed of dark has entered the chat*
Dark is the absence of light. But even if it has a speed, it would travel at the speed of light
@@SyDatNguyen-r4jliterally….
Vsauce made a video on this like 10 years ago@@SyDatNguyen-r4j
@@SyDatNguyen-r4jI think he means the speed of shadows? Anyways, shadows don't carry any information, and as such are one of the only things that can "travel" faster than the speed of light
Dark energy??
Average human walks so slow lmao...
What's wrong with me?
It must be taking very young and very old people who can barely walk into account?
Hello I hope you have a good day
Do you have long legs? If you do, that's probably why you walk so fast.
@@elishavelez8746 I think it's because I'm gay.
@@StanViviLee Best answer
Already an awesome video
The camera man when so fast that he entered the speed force.
What amazes me the most, that this is probably the best way to get me the idea on how vast the universe is. Having these number 1 ly/sec 100 ly/sec combined with these speeds is really blowing my mind. Thanks so much for this visualization.
And in between all this emptyness where are just one pale blue dot, with humans fighting for some ressources that we have to share, no matter what.
This is a complete masterpiece
the only "mistake" in this video is what actually we would see once approaching the light speed, which would be starting to see things in red, gradually to blue, then completely white and then black as light has "no time" to touch any sensors in the eyes.
What is seen in this video is much more like what you'd experience if you were travelling very close to the speed of light due to time-dilation. As you get closer to the speed limit, your apparent speed through space would appear to increase well beyond the speed of light, and what you would see would look similar to what you see in this video. What's actually happening is as your time slows down, you experience this as the rest of the universe speeding up, including the motion of all the stars, and your motion between them.
Your videos are always such a treat! Thank you for these awesome videos.
Hey Stargaze, Don't know if you'll ever read this but ive started watching your vids in 2020 or 21 and I instantly fell inlove with your channel I was getting into astronomy and you took a big part of adding into it, Even if I wasn't as much as interested before I still visit your channel from time to time to watch your videos again just to appreciate the universe overall and remember about how beautiful this is
Love your vids and keep up the good work ❤❤🎉
Wow, you've been around almost since the beginning! Thank you so much, I love reading comments like this. I'll keep working hard so there’s always something interesting for when you come back!!
@@Stargaze_youtube Wow! Thank you for replying!!! You've shifted my interests and dreams because of your space videos (I was only 10 at the time), I've gotten into The History of Our World and Maybe Our Universe, Maybe in the future I would love to contribute into discovering more If there still is left to do so, Everything in space is truly fascinating.
We will always be stuck to our solar system. For ever. Sad truth.
We really won’t be though, sure the nearest star is very far away but give humans a couple hundred years and if we don’t kill ourself by then we should be able to make it somewhere.
Even travelling at a million lightyears a second, you still feel like you're glacially drifting among an endless sea of galaxies.
Space is utterly humbling.
I agree. Images like the pale blue dot, so humbling
Although, in one hour, you would have traveled 3.6 billion light years. In less than a day, you’d reach the edge of the observable universe. Or at least what we believe it to be.
Just crazy how massive the universe is. The nearest galaxy to our own is travelling at 250,000mph towards us, and it’s still going to take 4.5 billion years to reach us. Then just take into account it’s our neighbour, and there are millions of galaxies, that are thousands of times further away than andromeda is… we are minuscule. Any person who truly believes we are the only life in the universe are truly mad. It’s guttering that we will never ever know, and never meet life outside of earth.
Interstellar theme will give goosebumps with this video
Always the best space vids stargaze
Thank you!!
Fascinating video, as always ! Thank you 😊
Great music
Technically if you as an observer were able to travel the speed of light across the galaxy it would take no time at all for you, it would be instantaneous. To an outside observer it would seem as if it took you 100,000 years.
Its like space engine fr
Your videos always put a smile on my face!
💚💚
As much as i love space and astronomy, something about that last shot, with all the other ‘universes’ lined up together unnerved me. For some reason i can see it ‘mathematically possible’ for them to be ordered in some way, but the idea of a ‘cosmic grid’ is something truly beyond scale
That last shot was the CMB. It's the radiation left by the Big Bang. That's not the same as other 'universes'. We have no idea if there is a multiverse. For now, all we know is that we have only one universe, we have only one Milky Way Galaxy, we have only one Sun and, obviously, we have only one small blue spot in the vast universe.... I wish that more people would realize that and that they stop making and raging wars....
amazing job!!!
Thank you!!
What about ludicrous speed?
Damn you beat me to it xD
Video can't render that, way too fast
Love the classics
What is ludicrous speed?
@@IntrovertSinceBirth remove yourself
Great video! Thanks!
Black hole escape velocity is greater than the speed of light
The numbers are cute. But the lack of reference makes the speed look unimpressive compared to the numbers. I would rather have an example of the speed in urban area where you can really tell the difference.
Your video is very intuitive to what I have seen in wikipedia
Great video. I love the thought experiment 👍
Very educational and enjoyable
Me is sadness not Joy in final
Thanks for letting us travel!!
You can as the observer travel faster than 300,000km/s. But the universe around you would be aging faster. You can keep accelerating forever but the time dilation around you would also keep speeding up so other observers wouldn't see you traveling faster than light relatively.
It might very well be possible there are multiple universes. The Milky Way was supposedly the entire known universe until Edwin Hubble discovered otherwise.
Yep. Even if we don't know, that logic applied to everything before... villages, continents, planets, stars, galaxies and now universes
@@dbsti3006 Do you think we’ll have sufficiently impressive cameramen to record it all eventually? 😜
@@MadDoodles Nope.
Amazing 😮 very good video
You believe in bubble universes! That amazing to see! That's why I've been a long subscriber of yours. Youre amazing, thank you so much for al these videos !
Well, I wouldn't be surprised if that were the case! I don't know how we could ever have evidence or counter-evidence for this, but still, I think it's more likely than not. Glad you like the content, ty!!
So in theory, to be faster than the speed of light. Which is relatively slow in comparison to the universe. The Object traveling would have to be mass-less? So for humans or anything physical to beat the speed of light it would require it to essentially no longer exist. There is an experiment using light that determines I'd something is being looked at, the particles are unstable and fluctuating until it is observed in physical space before it becomes stable. So we would essentially need to harness the power of being unobserved to travel past the speed of light. Sounds like my sex life.
ACUBIERRE DRIVE GO BRRR
nothing can stop space itself from traveling faster than light. nothing can travel faster than _through_ space faster than light, but nothing prohibits space from doing that. it’s why the universe expands faster than light
FTL is so overrated and unnecessary. Why? See this repost of my other comment here:
FUN FACT: the closer you travel to the speed of light, the quicker time appears to pass for you (because it's actually slowing down due to time dilation). This means if you travel really close to the speed of light, you can travel so quickly that from your perspective it appears as though you are travelling faster than the speed of light - so it would look just as it does in this video. And this means within a single human lifespan people could actually make enourmous journeys across our galaxy, and even between galaxies, if they can harness enough energy to travel at relativistic speeds (close to the speed of light).
FUN FACT 2: A person could travel 27,000 light-years to the Sagittarius A* supermassive blackhole at the centre of the Milkyway in what would feel like 1 year of journey time ("proper time" as experienced by the observer) if they could travel at 99.99999993% the speed of light.
FUN FACT 3: To accelerate a vehicle the same mass as the International Space Station (420,000kg) to this speed would require as much energy as the Sun emits in 2.64 seconds. Using a Dyson Swarm to redirect just 0.01% of the Sun's total energy output, you could accelerate a vehicle of this mass to that speed in just 7.33 hours.
FUN FACT 4: After just 1 year of apparent journey time for these voyagers, 27,000 years would have passed back on Earth, and they would now be arriving at the centre of the Mikyway. And if they didn't slow down and passed straight by, within about 2 years more travel time they would be leaving the other side of the Milkyway. And at this speed, it would take them just over 93 years of additional travel time to reach the Andromeda galaxy, 2.5 million years of Earth time later (if they were travelling in the right direction to begin with).
So with a network of Dyson Swarms, an advanced space-faring civilisation could build vast interstellar and intergalatic transportation networks offering passengers apparently-faster-than-light travel (so long as they don't mind returning home after however much 'real' time has actually passed).
@@af.tatchell STOP IGNORING ACUBIERRE DRIVES!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@@ДАРТАНЬЯН-з2щ from what I understand they require negative energy, and this may not be physically possible and/or technically feasible. It would be great if possible, but seems speculative. My bet is it isn't possible, and that's how the universe doesn't need to deal with FTL paradoxes. Plus, the mechanism I describe for Near-Lightspeed-Travel is completely non-speculative and requires no exotic technology.
Light speed in Vacuum in miles is 671million miles per hour.
Now, for the fictional speeds;
At 4:37 you're traveling as fast as The Silver Surfer's minimum galactic speed.
At 4:55, you're traveling as fast as SS's maximum intergalactic speed.
At 5:13, you're traveling Sentry's maximum travel speed in space.
At 5:23, you're basically Beyonder level and above.
Fastest speed is when she said she is home alone
Ha ha very funny
:|
My dad's belt can travel faster through my room
only if you're a simp
And the diarrea?
@@Mr.comment_lookerso...what did you gain from saying that?
So glad I subscribed to this channel.
Nothing is faster than chuck norris
Congrats to the cameraman
Good work !
would be great if you tried this in Microsoft flight simulator 2020
This channel is beautiful ❤
Extrapolation is the perfect soundtrack for Speed Comparison videos.
The cameraman did a great job 👍🏻
Some of these velocities should be shown on ground for better interpretation and comparison. Nice video btw
Probably the first time I understood how big is our galaxy.
What always confuses me about space is like are there directions like north south east west, or is there just relative proximity? When we are moving further and further away from earth what direction are we going towards, are there other directions we can go? From what perspective is the image of the universe taken from?
In space, directions like north, south, east, and west lose their meaning because they are based on Earth's magnetic poles. Instead, directions in space are relative to specific reference points, such as the Sun or the center of the galaxy. Movement in space is multidirectional and depends on the chosen reference system. The image of the universe is constructed from various observations made by telescopes, and since the universe has no central point, there is no single perspective.
Fun fact: Tachyons are hypothetical subatomic particles that always travel faster than light
Doom Guy got of falling in different planets, so he decided to tour in different speed by bragging how fast his space suit is.
it's quite frustrating that the universe is the size that it is and yet still expanding. there's so much stuff out there that we'll most likely never even know about, let alone be able to see. just traveling within the solar system would be a monumental achievement for future humans
it’s crazy because the pure chance that earth and it’s perfect conditions exist, therefore we can exist, makes me feel like there is a god; but then knowing the rest of the universe exists and because of its vastness and size makes me also believe there isn’t a god bc why would he care about little ole us? we aren’t significant in the grand scheme of things… i can’t explain it but it’s like both hopeful optimism & beauty looking inward, and dreadful nihilism and emptiness looking outward, all at the same time lol.
?
There's countless of other Earth like planets out there for sure, very possibly supporting life. As a species it just so happens we were born on this one. Someone or something else out there could be saying the same thing about their homeworld.
If you consider relavistic effects, then length contraction and time dilation will occur. This means the universe will contracts along your direction of motion and your time will slow down. This means at light speed, the trip would becomes instantaneous
In other words, we are stuck in earth’s vicinity FOREVER. We aren’t going anywhere. 😢
Fascinating video thank you😀
But what if we went slower? What if we started travelling at negative speed? Would that require the reversal of time itself?
Respect to cameraman
It's game Space engine from steam
@@Porosenok_miasnoy No, that's definitely real life footage.
@@Tagikakibau 🤡🤡🤡
@@Porosenok_miasnoy Wow, you really don't get the joke do you?
@@Tagikakibau clown🤡 means that this is funny🤡
I think the scientist already invented the Light speed engine which faster than the light a lot, but the problem is causing the human particles separated which means evaporation
Outer space is so amazing and mysterious. Yet scary. Our world feels so large, yet it's the tiniest fraction of what is out there.
What did you use to make this unity engine or something else or what I want to try this
Stargaze:
"After all these videos of falling inwards, it's time to fall outwards.
And I mean *really* fall outwards."
I got a theory, that outside our universe, there is other universes. And inside the other universes combined with ours, there will be another one covering all them. And then i just continues like that. The universe is a big mystery, i never think an astronomer or other scientist will ever be able to tell us the truth. The best thing right now, is to have theories that can make us wonder if it's true or not. A theory doesn't have any limits. The only limit, is that it can give us big questions of our life.
Actually in physics it can be possible to have a speed faster than light according to quantum physics if we have two particles one of them in upper direction other one immediately change the direction will be downward in case both particle in quantum entanglement . So if the distance between these two particles are 100 light years the speed of this change it's (100 light years /0 seconds )
2:10 I thought Sunbeam from subnautica was talking, but it's just neil Degrasse tyson 😂
Great art , could have been better if they shown all speeds at ground level
4:04 that is around 18,25 light days per second
Good video 💯👍
Incredible 🙌
The music is exceptionally good 👍
Where can i get it? It's simply astonishing!
All tracks are linked in the description
light only appears to have a speed when in reality it's already reached every possible destination all at once because time is a construct of consciousness
Thus : born too late to explore earth
Born too soon to explore the universe
what are your graphics settings?
Wtf so the cameraman is somewhere outside our galaxy right now? Someone explain pls
expansion of universe is faster than speed of light
SOFTWARE NAME: SPACE ENGINE
Beautiful
Thank you!
The mountains looks like SpaceEngine texture
In another universe, maybe I'm not useless
Humans as humans will be pretty much useless whenewer they are...
Wonderful
Clever ending. 👍 (could very well be).
It doesn’t help much to illustrate speed moving:
1) ..past large blurry hills when we have no idea of the relative size of the hills
2) ..so far away from Earth, moving away slowly, with nothing passing by
Maybe the last half of the video improved. ?
I’d like to see each speed example begin at earth to get a good comparison.
Me: wow that’s fast
The video: 2 minutes remaining
Technically we've already broken the speed of light. Although it is in a simulation we still did it. We fooled the laws of physics muahahahaha
5:10 Sonic in interstellar traveling speed
2:55 not only can Mario break planetoids the density of neutron stars in the Super Mario Galaxy games, but he can jump up fast enough from them