From a certain point of view, due to the fact that information cannot travel faster than the speed of light, you could argue that in our part of the galaxy the explosion truly hadn’t happened yet until the light got to us
@Ahbar Ahad what they mean is that information cannot travel faster than light, so until we saw it, it hadnt technically happened to us, as everything wouldve been the exact same until the light reached us, including gravity and any effect it mightve had etc.
@@urimc Why weep over the simple clarity conceptualized in the Physical Principle of Least Action, or by the Laws of Motion, Thermodynamics and Relativity? Because logic can prove a "Creator God" never existed for the simple reason that it is not necessary for it to exist and all things can be explained and understood without it?
@@cordongrouch9323 I dont know about you... but i have the feeling @Darth Uri meant it as a joke. Not sure if you meant that reply as a joke too or not but yeah.
Once in a lifetime? I would say Once in millenia or so. 2years of great night light in the sky... I am sure some believed that their God was doing something, or the end of the world.
@The super dogs OH, OK. If that is happening all the time, why are we talking about 1054 not another. This one was spectacular and it lasted 2 years. Imagine 2 years of bright night sky. How many did we see that in the last 100yrs?
What's also beautiful is the fact that 10,000 years ago people were not understanding what a bright light was but nowadays we have things that are thousands and thousands and thousands of miles away
Hate to burst your bubble, but it's extraordinarily unlikely anyone alive today will see Betelgeuse go supernova. Betelgeuse is ~600 light years away. In order for anyone alive today to see it explode, it would had to have already gone supernova somewhere around the time of Henry V. It's possible, but even with its perturbations, if they are the start of a supernova, but still unlikely. Stars lifecycles are counted in thousands and millions of years increments. I'd love to see Betelgeuse go supernova before I shuffle off this mortal coil too. I just know it's less likely than me being a sole powerball winner.
Its times like these, I wish my passion for math equaled my passion 4 space 😢, your awsome dude your vids make me remember day to day how small we really r and how we should humble ourselves thank u 💯
I believe Betelgeuse is at a point where it may go supernova at any moment. But with how things go in the universe, it's very possible that it may not happen in our life time or even our great-grandchildren's lifetime. However it COULD, and that is the best we can hope for at this point.
@@Idkidkidk494 what they meant was we evolved scientifically. These people didn’t know what it was and thought it was religious or the end of the world. People now know what it is.
If your wondering why it took so long to for the star to stop shine is because it's was millions of light years away so when it exploded it would be only 2 possibilities the material and gas would stay there for a short time but it would most likely be this the star was millions of light years away so when it exploded the light traveled for years to reach earth so when it did reach the light kept going it's like water still falling even if you closed the valve but it's light Example: the light of the sun takes 8:20 to reach earth so if the sun suddenly disappeared it would take 8:20 for us to realize it's gone because light is still traveling it's the same for the star
It's so sad that we will experience nothing compared to the things that are there to be experienced Edit: to everyone who replied me thanks a lot for your kind hearted comment It really helps me to understand the importance of being born in a era that doesn't have world ending ai, natural disaster or any other apocalypse. An era in which i can live and die peacefully cause i know that there are billions of galaxies in the cosmos with trillions of stars each having a planet inside its habitable zone with the possibility of life existing on them which is far greater than being born in stone age or a era of war in the past without this technology and modern science knowledge. Again thank you everyone for opening my eye :) (Not to mention that the universe is probably infinite so there could be a different me somewhere out there experiencing the things that I wanted to)
At least we are born now. In an age of medicine, discovery, understanding, science and technology. Better than being born in the past with little to no understanding of the universe, cold, starvation and strict rules and laws about modesty. At least we are born now before the water shortages, droughts, mass deforestation to the point of no return, infertility in humans due to the micro plastics we consume, be glad we won’t burn when the sun expands before imploding. We are in a time of safety after the age of technology was invented but before our apocalyptic demise.
The nebula is around 6500 light years away so it isn't really old compared to a lot of things we see out there. In real time, the star exploded 2k years after Gobleki Tepe was built
Maybe this would have been the bright light that Cholas of South India spotted 1000 years ago in Ponniyin Selvan novel. They misinterpreted it as a commet.
Plop twist:The Crab Nebula is a supernova remnant resulting from the explosion of a massive star in a historic supernova. Observed by a Chinese astronomer during the Song dynasty period from July 1054 to April 1056.
I’m sure there’s an easy explanation, but if we can still see with a telescope then why is it not still visible on earth? Like why did it go dim? I wanna assume it’s because it spread out wide enough to no longer be bright enough, but at the rate of space 1000 years just doesn’t seem long, and it didn’t even take that long to go dim. Again likely a very simple answer that’s going straight over my head. I’m curious😂 I should note it’s possibly a visible spec if you were in an area with no light pollution, im aware that that in the past 1000 years has definitely made a difference
I saw something like that a few years ago. Asked around, nobody seemed to know anything about but. It didn't last long, didn't move, and was slightly brighter than everything in the night sky. Then pow, it startled me. Like a ridiculous light turned on. Then at a point, it slowly dimmed then stayed fir awhile like it started, then gone.
@@robertm1672 you are saying that you watched a star explode. Right ? But the thing is there are no (visible to the naked eye) star explosions for almost a 1000 years
@Dolly Nawaka I am saying I saw something that resembled. Your adding I'm the rest. And your intellectually deceitful, as there's plenty of documented sightings of cosmic explosions. Fyi, I was at Lowell observatory. Feel stupid now.
My head when he said supernova Su -su su supernova nova can't stop hyperstellar 원초 그걸 찾아 Bring the light of a dying star 불러낸 내 우주를 봐봐, supernova So this is a kpop song
Of course this is recommended to me 968 years after the explosion happens
lmao
Fr😒
welp this is youtube what can you expect
youtube moment
💀
The star actually exploded in around 5000 BC but the light didn’t reach us until 1054 AD.
From a certain point of view, due to the fact that information cannot travel faster than the speed of light, you could argue that in our part of the galaxy the explosion truly hadn’t happened yet until the light got to us
@@josephwilliams5292 no, it had happened you just weren't there to observe it
@Ahbar Ahad what they mean is that information cannot travel faster than light, so until we saw it, it hadnt technically happened to us, as everything wouldve been the exact same until the light reached us, including gravity and any effect it mightve had etc.
@@TotallyTheOGMagnetaryeah and they are wrong because that’s not how the actual universe functions.
the star exploded in 5446 BC
"Physics is beautiful"
My physics teacher
Yeah.
But no, we don't care what Physics teachers think.
Not really, anyway.
@@cordongrouch9323 physics teachers crying in ohio rn
@@urimc Why weep over the simple clarity conceptualized in the Physical Principle of Least Action, or by the Laws of Motion, Thermodynamics and Relativity?
Because logic can prove a "Creator God" never existed for the simple reason that it is not necessary for it to exist and all things can be explained and understood without it?
@@cordongrouch9323 I dont know about you... but i have the feeling @Darth Uri meant it as a joke.
Not sure if you meant that reply as a joke too or not but yeah.
We call him" Ceo of XXX" 🤣 because he sometimes do strange exercise
Considering the Crab Nebula's distance to Earth is 6,523 light years, the star actually exploded 7,500 years ago.
And after we got crab pulsar
@@Homophogistcrab nebula and crab pulsar, crab pulsar is center of the nebula
Crab nebula is also called SN 1054, SN stands for Supernova and 1054 is the year
I was walking someday and i saw a star suddenly disappear from out nowhere idk if you belive me i got confused @samiahasham1986
people in 1054 didn't even know that they witnessed a truly once in a lifetime phenomenon
Once in a lifetime? I would say Once in millenia or so. 2years of great night light in the sky...
I am sure some believed that their God was doing something, or the end of the world.
Ya once in a lifetime is to common for this event.
it probably actually happened pretty long ago than that since the crab nebula is like 6500 lys away
@thesuperdogs3000 well that's like finding a Dino bone and saying we can still see dinosaurs
@The super dogs OH, OK. If that is happening all the time, why are we talking about 1054 not another. This one was spectacular and it lasted 2 years. Imagine 2 years of bright night sky. How many did we see that in the last 100yrs?
What's also beautiful is the fact that 10,000 years ago people were not understanding what a bright light was but nowadays we have things that are thousands and thousands and thousands of miles away
So true, that’s the most amazing part ❤
"Physics is beautiful"
Me who has phyiscs exam tomorrow and doesn't understand a thing: "Are you sure about that-"
Ikr physics is beautiful but only from far away once we get too close we see how it sucks our brain out if we aren’t geniuses
@@paulog.5788 Damn kainda deep...
I literally have physics exam tomorrow
The fact you can see something that humans saw 1000 years ago is beautiful
@@paulog.5788as someone who is about to start their third physics course. You could not be more correct.
"WAS THAT THE SUPERNOVA OF 87!?!!!?"
😂
Why am I here to suffer why did you say that
🤸💀😂
Supernova of ‘54
bro got me hyped up about betelgeuse
Hate to burst your bubble, but it's extraordinarily unlikely anyone alive today will see Betelgeuse go supernova. Betelgeuse is ~600 light years away. In order for anyone alive today to see it explode, it would had to have already gone supernova somewhere around the time of Henry V.
It's possible, but even with its perturbations, if they are the start of a supernova, but still unlikely. Stars lifecycles are counted in thousands and millions of years increments.
I'd love to see Betelgeuse go supernova before I shuffle off this mortal coil too. I just know it's less likely than me being a sole powerball winner.
@@DarkMatterX1 true it would take us very long to see it,also I like the maths you did involving Henry V
@@DarkMatterX1sad I really want to see a supernova
@@DarkMatterX1 i know, but its nice to wish for it to happen
It could blow tmw or in a thousand years or one hundred thousand. Exciting, hey?
"Physics is beautiful"
My Physics teacher after only 3 people passed the Physics exam
I adore astronomy more than the other branches of science.
Same
me too
If you adore a single science over the others you're not ready to study anything related to science.
@@skyral4137 I enjoy science in general, I have a greater interest in astronomy though.
@@skyral4137 Wtf are you talking about
The fact it was a star that you could see from earth and not from a other universe is so rare you couldn't even describe how rare that is.
Bro why’d it have to recommend this 968 years later 💀
Seems copied
@@cosmicvage9557 someone else could’ve said this first but I thought of it on my own so whatever you want to believe
@@GmaxBuckeye ok
@@cosmicvage9557 I just looked thru the top comments and yep someone said that before me
@@GmaxBuckeye ok mommy 🥱🥱🥱
" Physics is beautiful "
.......while explaining astronomy🙂🙂
"Physic is beautiful"
My physic teacher : "alr so we have to study everything we learned from the start of the year for this final test"
Physics is beautiful
@@AsnapYT 🤣🤞🏻 like ur comment**
@@AsnapYT 🤣🤞🏻liked ur comment**
Honestly bro, your videos are amazing! I actually learn things.
Man, me and my dad were talking about this like a couple hours ago and now this is the first thing I saw on YT when I opened it
It's called an internet cookie my dude
YT laughing In the corner
Google spies us
@eojpuerte5254 coincidence or something else
They know everything 📸🤨
You just gotta love this guy his shorts are beyond awesome.. 😊
And the crazy thing is that it would've already happened like 6,000 years before they saw that, damn space is fascinating
6,000? Must be millions of years old
@@the_fifth_letter nah, the nebula is 6k light years away from us
This is why I love your vids Kobi. Physics is always beautiful.
Its times like these, I wish my passion for math equaled my passion 4 space 😢, your awsome dude your vids make me remember day to day how small we really r and how we should humble ourselves thank u 💯
sometimes I wish my passion for math equaled my passion for science because it could get me a high paying job I love..
"Physics is beautiful"
Sir, people like you who shares information is beautiful 👍🏻
1000 years later and you can still see the explosion like it just happened
I never thought something could look so beautiful when it dies😲
I swear his eyes and videos are mesmerizing and bewitching. Even thought the info is terrifying. And I love it.
Creationists will never comprehend science
When will we witness something like this? 😩
I believe Betelgeuse is at a point where it may go supernova at any moment. But with how things go in the universe, it's very possible that it may not happen in our life time or even our great-grandchildren's lifetime. However it COULD, and that is the best we can hope for at this point.
@@sethmyers5666 yeah, best we can hope for is that It already went supernova a few hundred years ago. So we could see it happen now
We won't prolly haha
never😭
@@Milark "I Already Went Supernova" Bro What??
Supernova?? The aespa song 😂😂
"Physics is beautiful "
Looks at my physics score...
I don't deserve your beauty 💔
I don't even have physics yet..
must be easy
When he said supernova suddenly I was singing supernova 😅
We really have evolved rapidly 😮
He said 10 54
Not 2054
@@Idkidkidk494 what they meant was we evolved scientifically. These people didn’t know what it was and thought it was religious or the end of the world. People now know what it is.
If your wondering why it took so long to for the star to stop shine is because it's was millions of light years away so when it exploded it would be only 2 possibilities the material and gas would stay there for a short time but it would most likely be this the star was millions of light years away so when it exploded the light traveled for years to reach earth so when it did reach the light kept going it's like water still falling even if you closed the valve but it's light
Example: the light of the sun takes 8:20 to reach earth so if the sun suddenly disappeared it would take 8:20 for us to realize it's gone because light is still traveling it's the same for the star
Bro after this video , you making me crazy about betelgeuse and i am getting excited, i wish I could see this before closing my eyes permanently 🙂
Simple solution: shove your ass into a Chryogenic Chamber and wake up once it explodes
I love how excited we're getting over the literal death of something
😅 i cant wait to see betelguese go supernova ahaha
Love your enthusiasm. 👍🌠⭐️
It's so sad that we will experience nothing compared to the things that are there to be experienced
Edit: to everyone who replied me thanks a lot for your kind hearted comment
It really helps me to understand the importance of being born in a era that doesn't have world ending ai, natural disaster or any other apocalypse. An era in which i can live and die peacefully cause i know that there are billions of galaxies in the cosmos with trillions of stars each having a planet inside its habitable zone with the possibility of life existing on them which is far greater than being born in stone age or a era of war in the past without this technology and modern science knowledge. Again thank you everyone for opening my eye :)
(Not to mention that the universe is probably infinite so there could be a different me somewhere out there experiencing the things that I wanted to)
you will survive
there are worse things
@@SpandauJerry bruh
Maybe we’ll witness betelgeuse explode
@@SpandauJerry not for long.
At least we are born now. In an age of medicine, discovery, understanding, science and technology. Better than being born in the past with little to no understanding of the universe, cold, starvation and strict rules and laws about modesty.
At least we are born now before the water shortages, droughts, mass deforestation to the point of no return, infertility in humans due to the micro plastics we consume, be glad we won’t burn when the sun expands before imploding.
We are in a time of safety after the age of technology was invented but before our apocalyptic demise.
Him:"Physics is beautiful"
Me: I'll never use that anywhere
Ok
Its just crazy how that had actually happened millions of years ago
1000 years ago*
The nebula is around 6500 light years away so it isn't really old compared to a lot of things we see out there. In real time, the star exploded 2k years after Gobleki Tepe was built
@@Flowersinadesert ok well i wasn't expecting my statistics to be right... i kainda just assumed without googleing it.
My bad i guess
@@errorgames3295 most of the time your guess would be right. The Crab Nebula happens to be close which is unusual in this massive universe
"Physics is Beautiful"
Physics exam - hold my beer...
Correction: space and space physics is beautiful
So this is how I learned how the crab Nebula formed😮😮😮😮
Props to the guy who went back to 1054 to take some pictures for us
Physics is really beautiful ❤❤
Imagine watching betelguese explode into supernova
😅 ahahaha i cant wait until it happens ahahah oh god save me
this guy made me addicted to space and science
Su-su-su-su-supernova
"Physics is beautiful"
Damn right 😎
Feels illegal to be this early
No it doesn't
@@safix_0734it does
Feels illegal to be this late
@@Allu681 did you forget about betelguse
nah you are 1000 years late mate
what a wonderful video! I thank you kindly. job well done keep up the good work. carry on Soldier!
I download Every Single Video Of Your's
And Saved it In My PC ❤️
Why tho?
@@montavi idk maybe addicted
@@gokuman821 nah, he’s just an NPC
The Universe is beautiful ❤️
Won't we witness a death of a star nearly ?without telescopes or anything just a clear luminous explosion in the sky ...😫🌌
probably no😭
Physics is beautiful
That one question of Physics Make me to 💀
As a man born in 1054, i can confirm that this did happen
“Physics is beautiful”
Me studying physics for physics exam and I don’t know anything 😭😭
Dont worry i got you just dont get too close
The Waffle House has found it's new host
"Physics is beautiful"
Physics Teacher and Physics Exam : And I took that personally
“The people looking to the death of supernova 1054”
The people: dayum the fuck is happending up there.
Physics is really beautiful
Astronomy is by far my favorite branch of science
The fact that the brightness of the supernova vanished after two years is incredible.
Just like the song supernova 😊
So jealous. I don't often fret over my mortality but gosh I'd love to see something like that in my lifetime
Props to the cam man goin back in time
I love this nebula in particular, i have it as my phone case from rhinoshield and their colab with NASA
Su su su supernova, NOVA can’t stop hyperstella!
Yeah, p6 is beautiful 🥲😭
As a kid I always thought falling stars were stars dying
Physics is beautiful, and so are you
Gosh you turned me on😩
Bro 1054 year
People before 1054:😮
I love that my aespa girlies have been active since 1054, it really shows dedication to the fans 😍
Physics is indeed beautiful
Maybe this would have been the bright light that Cholas of South India spotted 1000 years ago in Ponniyin Selvan novel. They misinterpreted it as a commet.
the supernova of 1054
me: THE BITE OF 87 OR 81
That fact they were looking at a star that exploded yearssss ago is just insane
Aespa after waching this💀
"physics is so beautiful"
*my physics teacher being a bully*
Ah yes, we definetly discovered what the hell a death of a star is in 2054
i'm so jealous of them
I was going to like until he said physics is beautiful 💀
"Sometimes science is more art than science Morty, many people don't get that..."
Plop twist:The Crab Nebula is a supernova remnant resulting from the explosion of a massive star in a historic supernova. Observed by a Chinese astronomer during the Song dynasty period from July 1054 to April 1056.
Physics is absolutely incredible
I’m sure there’s an easy explanation, but if we can still see with a telescope then why is it not still visible on earth? Like why did it go dim? I wanna assume it’s because it spread out wide enough to no longer be bright enough, but at the rate of space 1000 years just doesn’t seem long, and it didn’t even take that long to go dim. Again likely a very simple answer that’s going straight over my head. I’m curious😂
I should note it’s possibly a visible spec if you were in an area with no light pollution, im aware that that in the past 1000 years has definitely made a difference
Voltron made me love space and this dude makes me feel nostalgic I wanna be a astronaut 😢
Bro the sound playing in the back makes this so much cooler
" supernova "
*Dances supernova*
so glad I found aespa fans here 😂
"physics are beautiful"
my physics teacher after teaching us that bouncing physics.
A Star explodes
Everyone:
It's god!
Nah its my friends they do it fir attention
I love that they called it a "guest star".
Damn RUclips algorithm recommends me this AFTER it’s already happened 😒😔
su su su supernova (nova)
can’t stop, hyperstellar🎀🎀
I once saw a star dissappear with my naked eye. I wasn't looking directly at it, but a single spot suddenly dissappeared.
I saw something like that a few years ago. Asked around, nobody seemed to know anything about but. It didn't last long, didn't move, and was slightly brighter than everything in the night sky. Then pow, it startled me. Like a ridiculous light turned on. Then at a point, it slowly dimmed then stayed fir awhile like it started, then gone.
This is not something that happens to only a particular someone if it happens it happens to everyone
@@dollynawaka7733 what?
@@robertm1672 you are saying that you watched a star explode. Right ? But the thing is there are no (visible to the naked eye) star explosions for almost a 1000 years
@Dolly Nawaka I am saying I saw something that resembled. Your adding I'm the rest. And your intellectually deceitful, as there's plenty of documented sightings of cosmic explosions. Fyi, I was at Lowell observatory. Feel stupid now.
"It is so beautiful, " - in highs that you can't even fit into 60 seconds!
The funny thing is that how the heck did the information past on for a 1000 years
Nah that’s just alderon being decimated by the Death Star earth is so far away that we saw it happen long after it really did
Tomorrow is my Physics Test so I Say Space is Beautiful 😍
My head when he said supernova
Su -su su supernova nova can't stop hyperstellar
원초 그걸 찾아
Bring the light of a dying star
불러낸 내 우주를 봐봐,
supernova
So this is a kpop song
Beautiful and fascinating
the crab nebula is so beautiful. i had no idea about this! makes it even better!