These 17 and a half minutes were more inspiring, interesting, informative, emotional, well written and visually put together than the last 500 minutes of Hollywood I have seen. And they felt like time well spent, not wasted. Thanks Scott!
I’ve probably watched this video 4 or 5 times since Scott released it, and it never fails to amaze me. I get goosebumps every single time I watch it, especially towards the end.
huh, never thought about that before... but coudn't you argue that about most space vessels? If you start on a planet, leave and then come back and land... you've only entered once.. hmmm
Gummy Bugz think about it! Unless you were born in that room, you have to enter it before you’re able to leave it in the first place! Therefore you can only enter a room if you are going there for the first time, or were born in it, leave and come back!
If you turn Scott Manley upside down and have him re-enter the earths atmosphere, there would be no heat or any sort of energy, his head would make the air molecules go right around it.
I followed this wonderful probe since before the launch....every day I clicked on to it's progress....for years. This has been one of the epic missions of space. The degree of control from Earth was stunning, a tribute to the design team and all who played their part......and I shed a tear during those last moments. Huygens survives to prove to future space travellers it all really happened!
I have a lot to say about this: 1. amazing that people in the 1700s were viewing these moons 2. It’s amazing that this spacecraft had the abilities that it does 3. It’s incredible the data that this thing has collected 4. The photos must be super satisfying for everyone involved 5. Our universe is phenominal 6. Imagine all the other things we don’t know that are in our universe 7. Our universe is super aesthetic. 8. Thank you for the great video!
RIP Cassini, you will always be loved, missed and fondly remembered :(. Then you realise that we're talking about a robotic probe. And anyway, every good space mission includes an explosion at some point!
10:25 That's one of my favorite astronomical photos, and probably my favorite photo of Saturn. It's so amazing and well done that it actually looks fake, like its so perfect that it might have been done in Photoshop or some other graphics program (not that I think it is fake).
Wonderful summary Scott. I must salute the Cassini team, many of whom have spent their entire careers in making this such a sccess. Ten years in the planning and building, seven years in travel time, thirteen around Saturn.
You've given a better public end-of-mission summary than NASA has managed to of the fantastic work put in by the Cassini team -- nice job! Let's hope that this mission is as inspirational for current generations as Voyager and others were for prior generations.
3:08 I've always been impressed by how clever and resourceful some of the engineers and astrophysicists can be when they come up with ways to benefit from scenarios that others would typically give up on.
This is the kind of video that could easily inspire someone to go into astronomy or want to work for NASA on building the next outer solar system probe. Imagine what they could do with modern HD cameras and improved storage devices and radio protocols. Shame we're unlikely to get any funding for meaningful NASA activity during the next few years...
Europa is next on the outer system menu. The Europa Clipper mission (already funded) may well be expanded to include a lander. As for technology boosts, HD and natural color don't necessarily add to the science return. In reality, the high resolution camera on Curiosity (which is better than HD I believe--check for yourself) is useless for rover driving because its optical sensors traded spacial resolution to get a color response similar to that of a commercial camera. [There are also programmatic issues which make this data available too late to be used for the next sol's planning, as I recall.]
Yes, that is a good amount of funding. Enough to do pretty much anything the agency set its focus on. However, it's not enough to do *everything* that Congress and the administration are asking NASA to do. So some things, like SLS, just get stretched out from 4 yr programs to 10 year programs in order to make budget targets.
I think the point was that ambitious demands by politicians are getting temporarily thrown in the bin because of lack of funding, then the politicians complain that not enough has been done. :/
Scott, this is my favourite of your videos. In fact I think this video is the best imo on RUclips. Thank you so much for creating this. Many of my family are actually named after the moons of Saturn and I am sharing this amazing video with them. Thank you so much for your contribution and please if you can do continue. This was truly astounding.
This is a magnificent video, and I really appreciate your hard work on this content (as do many other people)! Despite how you said that you were very broad in your commentary, it was nonetheless very informative and was presented in a way most people can follow. That is why I love sharing these videos with family members who don't have the same appreciation/enthusiasm for unmanned space exploration. Thanks a lot, and keep up the incredible work!
Congratulations on the video. The Sérgio Sacani , “Space Today”, here in Brazil, asked you for the video. Beautiful, wonderful. Hugs for all of Brazil.
This is definietely one of the best videos you have ever made. So many pictures I had never seen before. The video of the probe landing on titan literally gave me chills, so awesome.
What an incredible video that was Scott. Had me gripped to my seat from start to finish. That's the kind of informative doco I enjoy watching. Keep them coming.
This is one of the best videos you've ever created! Thank you so much for this! Your style of narrating things here makes me open my mouth and say "wow"! Go on, Mr Manley!
We are some tiny ants in a slightly less tiny sandbox in a Universe that is so huge that we will never be able to understand it all. But thankfully some brilliant men give us the opportunity to sometimes discover little chunks of it. This is a wonderful thing. What a time to be alive.
14:03 bro why is nobody talking about this, it blew my mind I didn’t know that something like that in our solar system exists! only that smaller moons share with a moon but its still technically a moon orbiting a moon! This is a mind blowing from tethys and dione!!
At first i didn't think much of the people who were crying over the end of this mission, but when you add up all the things it's done like that, i can't help getting choked up myself! Thanks for giving this overview, i hadn't realized all the data and imagery this one mission had done.
Just think of the people that have been with the program, receiving data from Cassini for decades. When the last signal is received, it will be a sad time for them, to be sure.
Great video! This thing launched before I was born, and now we watching its mission come to an end, and celebrating the achievements of this marvelous probe!
So much I didn't know. I found the way this mission ended to be quite emotional. The Verge did a little piece on it with heavy music and I did tear up. Amazing mission and thanks for the time spent giving us all this super interesting information. I just want to know more now.
Those were the movies, weren't they? I thought the books were consistent, but the movie 2010 went to Jupiter instead of Saturn to "simplify" things. I'm a (non-planetary) scientist by traning, and I have to admit I have the same problem. Because of the 2001/2010 Jupiter/Saturn silliness, I have to think really really hard about which moons/features are associated with which planet.
5000th like :-) Cassini, you will be sorely missed! It flew for 20 years but the project started 15 years before launch. I hope there are projects started today that will become equally awesome in the coming decades. Get on it, Planetary Society! :-)
Farewell great voyager. You have gone farther then I will in this life. May your metallic remains rest peacefully in the vicinity Saturn. Cassini you have seen more with you mechanical eye and said more with your electronic voice than I ever possibly could. You have opened up new horizons of knowledge. May your unseen Viking funeral be a magnificent sight. Godspeed great traveler and goodbye. And thank you
Can't believe that was a year ago already, I stayed up until the early morning with my telescope to see Saturn and a laptop to see the live feed of the radio connection between Earth and Cassini be cut off. It was a truly moving experience!
Cassini is like the camera-toting journalist reporting her exploration to those at home. And when we asked her to dive down to her death on Saturn, to record things no one has ever seen or known, she obliged. No drama, performing well above and beyond her design, faithful until the very end.
These 17 and a half minutes were more inspiring, interesting, informative, emotional, well written and visually put together than the last 500 minutes of Hollywood I have seen.
And they felt like time well spent, not wasted.
Thanks Scott!
Magnificent video Scott, magnificent video.
Indeed! Awesome quality and info.
miwove epic
Great Scott!!
I’ve probably watched this video 4 or 5 times since Scott released it, and it never fails to amaze me. I get goosebumps every single time I watch it, especially towards the end.
Technically, it's not re-entering Saturn, it's just entering.
Syrot Koxevans Clearly a student of asstronomy!
huh, never thought about that before... but coudn't you argue that about most space vessels? If you start on a planet, leave and then come back and land... you've only entered once.. hmmm
Gummy Bugz think about it! Unless you were born in that room, you have to enter it before you’re able to leave it in the first place! Therefore you can only enter a room if you are going there for the first time, or were born in it, leave and come back!
good someone knows that you can only re-enter unless it was there before and is coming back
Maybe it's to do with re-entering atmosphere regardless of body.
When cassini launched did you have -hair- a non aerodynamic head?
CaptainPep Seldon :))))))))
If you turn Scott Manley upside down and have him re-enter the earths atmosphere, there would be no heat or any sort of energy, his head would make the air molecules go right around it.
@@cukik6325 Maybe he would hit the ground at orbital speed, but would lithobrake gently.
14:48 "Cassini has spent more than a decade at Jupiter"
Whoopsie daisies, Scott!
otherwise it's really amazing though.
This mistake makes everything meaningless! :P
Nitpick... also THIS IS WHY WE STILL NEED ANNOTATIONS! Stupid YT team!
That's it then, earth is flat, moon landing's a hoax, pack up everything boys!
What, all gas giants look the same to you? Such a planetist!
I followed this wonderful probe since before the launch....every day I clicked on to it's progress....for years. This has been one of the epic missions of space. The degree of control from Earth was stunning, a tribute to the design team and all who played their part......and I shed a tear during those last moments. Huygens survives to prove to future space travellers it all really happened!
*_R.I.P Cassini 1997-2017_*
R.I.P.
It lived a long and peacefull life
I consider the backlit Saturn image one of the most beautiful images ever made.
I have a lot to say about this:
1. amazing that people in the 1700s were viewing these moons
2. It’s amazing that this spacecraft had the abilities that it does
3. It’s incredible the data that this thing has collected
4. The photos must be super satisfying for everyone involved
5. Our universe is phenominal
6. Imagine all the other things we don’t know that are in our universe
7. Our universe is super aesthetic.
8. Thank you for the great video!
When Scott Manley says 'explorers' it sounds like 'exploders'. I'm not sure if it's because of his accent or hist time with KSP.
When he said "Titan" for the first time, I was thinking "did he just mispronounce 'Tylo'?"
RIP Cassini, you will always be loved, missed and fondly remembered :(. Then you realise that we're talking about a robotic probe.
And anyway, every good space mission includes an explosion at some point!
Alric8 *cough cough* Kerbal Space Program *cough*
The nearer the end of the mission the explosion takes place, the better.
VainerCactus 0 well one could argue, that an explosion is usually the end of the mission, scheduled or not :D
Yeah, true.
"Will I dream?"--- 2010
Rest in peace Cassini. You bettered are understanding of science and Saturn. You will be lost but not forgotten.
I'll be raising a drink to Cassini tomorrow :(
But not are understanding of grammar.
*our
SaltyWaffles dang it I was gonna say that
RIP Cassini Huygens
1997-2017
You and your discoveries will never be forgotten.
So... How many science points does earth get from this one satellite? I was hoping we would have enough to unlock Ion Propulsion
It's because the return on transmitted science is so low!
9999999999999999 science!
Just enough points for the government to unlock a new nuke that they'll use because something something something something.
10:25 That's one of my favorite astronomical photos, and probably my favorite photo of Saturn. It's so amazing and well done that it actually looks fake, like its so perfect that it might have been done in Photoshop or some other graphics program (not that I think it is fake).
Wonderful summary Scott. I must salute the Cassini team, many of whom have spent their entire careers in making this such a sccess. Ten years in the planning and building, seven years in travel time, thirteen around Saturn.
You almost made me tear up at the end.
The outro saved me.
One of your best videos Mr Manley, more of this please. I subbed for KSP but I stay for the science! :)
14:50 "Cassiny has spent over a decade orbiting Jupiter"
Damn you, Jupiter, stealing our satellites!
+NoName I clearly mispronounced Saturn
that silent j gets me all the time
Politiekman
Holy Gooblegobbles, I can find you everywhere, Politiekman. :P Didn't know you were a fellow rocketman.
@@icannotfly "Satjurn"...
Dinkleburg!!!!!!
10:25 - I just found my new desktop background.
Thank you, cassini for this amazing picture and thank you scott for this amazing video!
You've given a better public end-of-mission summary than NASA has managed to of the fantastic work put in by the Cassini team -- nice job! Let's hope that this mission is as inspirational for current generations as Voyager and others were for prior generations.
This is a wonderful synopsis of the Cassini-Huygens mission. Thanks so much Scott! It was an amazing mission with so many complex parts.
Fascinating stuff, Scott. Thank you doing doing these kinds of thing. Fly safe, homie.
Well put together, great narration.
That Ending was quite... Emotional... Felt like a funeral...
Well done, Scott!
3:08 I've always been impressed by how clever and resourceful some of the engineers and astrophysicists can be when they come up with ways to benefit from scenarios that others would typically give up on.
Thank u Scott, Just amazing....
This is the kind of video that could easily inspire someone to go into astronomy or want to work for NASA on building the next outer solar system probe. Imagine what they could do with modern HD cameras and improved storage devices and radio protocols. Shame we're unlikely to get any funding for meaningful NASA activity during the next few years...
"Any funding"
I think $19 billion qualifies as meaningful funding...
Europa is next on the outer system menu. The Europa Clipper mission (already funded) may well be expanded to include a lander. As for technology boosts, HD and natural color don't necessarily add to the science return. In reality, the high resolution camera on Curiosity (which is better than HD I believe--check for yourself) is useless for rover driving because its optical sensors traded spacial resolution to get a color response similar to that of a commercial camera. [There are also programmatic issues which make this data available too late to be used for the next sol's planning, as I recall.]
Yes, that is a good amount of funding. Enough to do pretty much anything the agency set its focus on. However, it's not enough to do *everything* that Congress and the administration are asking NASA to do. So some things, like SLS, just get stretched out from 4 yr programs to 10 year programs in order to make budget targets.
I think the point was that ambitious demands by politicians are getting temporarily thrown in the bin because of lack of funding, then the politicians complain that not enough has been done. :/
We really need to hope private space exploration takes off soon. Government sucks at doing things.
Scott, this is my favourite of your videos. In fact I think this video is the best imo on RUclips. Thank you so much for creating this. Many of my family are actually named after the moons of Saturn and I am sharing this amazing video with them. Thank you so much for your contribution and please if you can do continue. This was truly astounding.
This is a magnificent video, and I really appreciate your hard work on this content (as do many other people)! Despite how you said that you were very broad in your commentary, it was nonetheless very informative and was presented in a way most people can follow. That is why I love sharing these videos with family members who don't have the same appreciation/enthusiasm for unmanned space exploration. Thanks a lot, and keep up the incredible work!
Fantastic video ... will be showing it to my kids as soon as possible... many thanks.
Thank you Cassini. You have supplied us with images that transcend words, data that unlocks the imagination and the awe to inspire another generation
Awesome, as always
The sheer range of different kinds of observations done alone is amazing.
Hyperion is also the name of an epic poem by John Keats which in turn gave its name to my favorite book series: The Hyperion Cantos by Dan Simmons
Congratulations on the video. The Sérgio Sacani , “Space Today”, here in Brazil, asked you for the video. Beautiful, wonderful. Hugs for all of Brazil.
This is definietely one of the best videos you have ever made. So many pictures I had never seen before. The video of the probe landing on titan literally gave me chills, so awesome.
Wow. What a fabulous mini documentary on this amazing mission. Thank you for putting this together. Great Educational Material.
What an incredible video that was Scott. Had me gripped to my seat from start to finish. That's the kind of informative doco I enjoy watching. Keep them coming.
The more I read about these missions the more curious I get. Thank you Scott for explaining this well.
The music volume and type this time was better for me. Thx!
This is one of the best videos you've ever created! Thank you so much for this! Your style of narrating things here makes me open my mouth and say "wow"! Go on, Mr Manley!
A little bit of both.
I just knew this video would come and I've been looking forward to it. Thx Scott.
This is the video about Cassini I've always wanted to see. Well done.
We are some tiny ants in a slightly less tiny sandbox in a Universe that is so huge that we will never be able to understand it all. But thankfully some brilliant men give us the opportunity to sometimes discover little chunks of it. This is a wonderful thing. What a time to be alive.
Man, I get goosebumps everytime I watch this video.
This is the most thrilling commentary on the Cassini Huygens mission in existence.
I could listen hours upon hours to you talking about stuff like this
14:03 bro why is nobody talking about this, it blew my mind I didn’t know that something like that in our solar system exists! only that smaller moons share with a moon but its still technically a moon orbiting a moon! This is a mind blowing from tethys and dione!!
Scott Manley I'm happy you made this cuz I remember when it launched and once I found out it's mission ended
Stunning! Goodbye Cassini and thanks for all the pictures!
Thank you for your awesome summary of Cassini's wonderful mission.
Glad for the commentary, but also glad that you left the companion video without a voice track.
At first i didn't think much of the people who were crying over the end of this mission, but when you add up all the things it's done like that, i can't help getting choked up myself! Thanks for giving this overview, i hadn't realized all the data and imagery this one mission had done.
This has to the best video you have produced, very moving
Cassini-Huygens was one of my favorite space projects. The photographs are incredible.
I get too emotionally attached to these machines...
Just think of the people that have been with the program, receiving data from Cassini for decades. When the last signal is received, it will be a sad time for them, to be sure.
Great video! This thing launched before I was born, and now we watching its mission come to an end, and celebrating the achievements of this marvelous probe!
Wow, tearing up here at the end. ;(
Why do I have teary eyes now... Amazing video Scott! Thanks :D
So much I didn't know. I found the way this mission ended to be quite emotional. The Verge did a little piece on it with heavy music and I did tear up. Amazing mission and thanks for the time spent giving us all this super interesting information. I just want to know more now.
A beautiful dedication to this space probe!
Not many people can make a 20 minute long video so interesting. Nice job!
"Cassini has spent over a decade at Jupiter" obviously you mean Saturn.
Oh god... this is what happens when you don't have editors.....
Well whoever didnt know what you meant by that time into the video hasnt been paying attention anyways and wont notice it.. :p
Scott Manley we forgive you.
Its ok Scott, it is an easy mistake to make. Arthur C. Clarke did the same thing between 2001 and 2010.
Those were the movies, weren't they? I thought the books were consistent, but the movie 2010 went to Jupiter instead of Saturn to "simplify" things.
I'm a (non-planetary) scientist by traning, and I have to admit I have the same problem. Because of the 2001/2010 Jupiter/Saturn silliness, I have to think really really hard about which moons/features are associated with which planet.
Thank you Scott for sharing this amazingly well-illustrated narrative of one of the most incredible machine sent to far space.
Amazing narration! Almost cried here, excellent job!
This probe holds a special place in my heart because it entered Saturn's orbit the day I was born.
cant overstate how much I appreciate your content
This was an awesome video Scott... Thank you and stay lucky!
5000th like :-)
Cassini, you will be sorely missed! It flew for 20 years but the project started 15 years before launch. I hope there are projects started today that will become equally awesome in the coming decades. Get on it, Planetary Society! :-)
Seeing those moons forming is amazing, what an inspiring mission. Thanks Scott
I will never be ceased to amazement at how smart certain human beings are.. This just blows me away.
Exactly.
What a beautiful voyage and video! Please Scott, make more of these!
Incredible images. Thank you for sharing this Scott.
Fascinating. Excellent video Mr. Scott!
Thank you Scott, this was a beautiful send off for such a historic craft
Damn Scott that ending straight up made me cry
Thank you, Scott. Beautiful work.
this is very well done, I hope it becomes a very popular video for you. I watched the ad's all the way through so you would get some more pennies!
This was absolutely beautiful.
Fascinating images and story.
That was an amazing video, thank you and well done, Cassini is and already has gone down in history
Farewell great voyager. You have gone farther then I will in this life. May your metallic remains rest peacefully in the vicinity Saturn. Cassini you have seen more with you mechanical eye and said more with your electronic voice than I ever possibly could. You have opened up new horizons of knowledge. May your unseen Viking funeral be a magnificent sight. Godspeed great traveler and goodbye. And thank you
Can't believe that was a year ago already, I stayed up until the early morning with my telescope to see Saturn and a laptop to see the live feed of the radio connection between Earth and Cassini be cut off. It was a truly moving experience!
Great video, Scott! Summarizes well everything Cassini did.
Thank you for this video. Absolutely outstanding.
Great Video, Scott. Thank you man. Cheers from Brazil!
Saturn? OPM exploration KSP campaign !
Amazing video Scott, thanks... those images gave me nerdgasm !!
Beautiful video Scott, very very well done.
Maybe your best video ever Scott. Do more like this!
A tear or two rolled down my face
Cassini is like the camera-toting journalist reporting her exploration to those at home.
And when we asked her to dive down to her death on Saturn, to record things no one has ever seen or known, she obliged. No drama, performing well above and beyond her design, faithful until the very end.
Thank you so much for this video! It's awesome to see a summary like this
Hey Scott. I started watching you videos to get better at ksp. but i really like the non ksp stuff too. Big fan! love what you do
I really enjoyed this video scott, the narration and story you told was great
That was an awesome tribute to the mission, Thank you for the wonderful video.
Love your mission retrospective and history video's like this. Keep up the good work!
Thank you for the overview of the mission Scott. I really enjoyed it.
Thanks for this well-done overview of the mission.
I really enjoy these high detail science vids.
Wow. This was incredible. Thank you, Scott!