Your call to interview up-and-coming astronomers, this was the best 45 seconds on any show you did, ever. 90% of interviewees are interviewed frequently! This offer you make changes that, and this is Good 👍❤️
From “The Gaia Successor in 2021“ (Erik Høg 2021) on arxiv: “ESA has now ranked the development of this mission so high that a launch about 2045 is quite probable.“
This is twice longer then GAIA lifetime, which is limited by fuel, cosmic radiation damage of silicon CCD, gyroscopes , micrometeorites, etc. I wish they manufactured a few GAIAs and launch one every few years to benefit from economy of scale.
@kamilZ2 I would love to see Gaia 2. Two space parallax telescopes at Jupiter's L4 and L5. Roughly 5 AU of parallax distance. And with two telescopes, you don't have to wait 6 months, it's instant. This was tested with New Horizons and an Earth telescope a few years ago, after "Ultima Thule," the space snowman. If I remember correctly, it was tested on Alpha Centaury.
@@kamilZ2 This is something I been hoping would be done for decades, e.g. also for Cassini, New Horizon, JWST, Hubble etc etc. I can't for the world understand why this is not done. All the construction and development are done after the first unit! Br
In a very early episode of Red Dwarf, Rimmer is trying (again) to pass his astro-navigation exams, to become an officer. The question he's working on is "What does the red spectrum tell us about Quasars?" As you might expect, he begins his answer the same way that a kid would begin a book report, for a book they didn't bother reading. When he's finished waffling, a look of confusion comes over him as he asks aloud "What the hell is a Quasar???" When I first saw that episode, way back in the early 90s, it prompted me to try to answer Rimmer's question. I wanted to know what the hell a Quasar was. Unfortunately, I had no reliable method of discovering answers to such questions back then, so that quandary stayed with me for at least ten years, possibly longer! Gods damn it!!! Now I wanna go and rewatch all 12 seasons and 2 movies of Red Dwarf!!
BTW, your interviews and the subjects and scientists you select are excellent. I greatly appreciate the knowledge, understanding and insight I have gained through watching them.
I continually learn _sooo_ much from this channel. He puts in full time hours on these productions and it's abundantly obvious. In my opinion it's one of the best space channels on the entire internet. Love it!
My husband spent the first half of his career studying trans-iron high energy cosmic rays. He leaned towards the super bubble theory, but I remember how giddy he was, as we sat in the NASA colloquium in 2017(?) for the multi-messenger observation of a binary neutron star merger. It was like he was suddenly seeing new possibilities for the science he loved so much. When he gets up tomorrow, I'll make sure he knows about new paper about neutron star merger flares as a trans iron cosmic ray origination. He's in aerospace now, but you never forget your first love. Thank you.
Satellites like Gaia should be made in such a way that a servicing robot with supplies could be launched to resupply satellites. I'm actually surprised this isn't already being done.
How about an interview with a custodian at one of the major labs like LHC? I think it would be very cool to see about what kinds of mundane things are needed to keep those things running.
As soon as the new Congress is sworn in find out who''s on the appropriate committees and get constituents to write the members arguing for U.S. funding to 'fast track' Gaia[V]NIR. Space science has almost no constituency, and a lot of its current advocates have, for better or worse, managed to burn some bridges. Anything you do will matter!
There will still be a lot of science done with Gaia data, and I think that includes Gaia data that has been collected but hasn't been fully analysed or calibrated yet, so science with the longest most precise measurements should still be coming, which is cool.
Gaia is one of my all time favorite exciting missions as well! I would love to hear more about how such a vast amount of data is transmitted, stored, and analyzed - a topic applicable to the other space telescopes as well. Thanks for your superb science communication and awesome RUclips channel!
The Japanese lunar vehicle is going to have a big problem with door seals. The lunar regolith will tear those seals to shreds. Also the capsule will be coved with regolith as the astronauts bring in the dust. The problem can not be eliminated. Lunar regolith is a serious problem. 6:58
Which would be better: fly a mission to Lagrange Point 2 to catch and attach to Gaia or to send up a new version of Gaia with over a decade’s worth of technology improvements?
New GAIA with IR capability and, perhaps, greater resolution. This should be a collaborative mission between NASA, the ESA and the Chinese Space agency. I know that sounds radical....but it's really not..... ESA can run the project and the USA and China can contribute. It might be based on the mission model of MAUVE.
Regarding Ingenuity. Good story on your drone crash theory NASA. Everyone already knows that the Sandstorm elementals got fed-up with the buzzy flying thing hovering over their home and snatched it out of the air. 🙄
I want a Super Gaia! Two space near/mid infrared parallax telescopes orbiting at Jupiter's L4 and L5. That would roughly give 5 AU of parallax distance. Put a tight beam com laser on it, and an Epstein drive. Starship, New Glen, and SLS would take way too long. 😂
Too bad we can't send resupply-drones out to Perseverance. Maybe one big drone carrying many more 'standard sized ones' like before, or with 'standard drones as its motors' and the main ship being tons of battery and solar panels and maybe a tiny RTG for heat to keep the battery from freezing or whatever. It just heads in the direction that NASA sends it updates for every now and then so it can try to get to some area near the rover's path, and aside from that just 'fly wnw and don't run into anything on the way' to get to that general area. Yeah yeah yeah, I know there's more reasons than JUST that why it's unlikely, but I'd love if it could be done.
Maybe Jared Isaacman will volunteer to go fix it in a modified Dragon capture with a Mars class service module. He could fix Hubble on the way back. 👍🏼
OK, you asked for experts in relevant fields. So let’s discuss the production of food and space Making protein 16:00 from methane and ammonia Also, making protein from carbon dioxide and hydrogen And incidentally Sugars can be derived without need for plants or photosynthesis - see Tobias ERB And the Chinese have developed a synthesis of starch again without needing photosynthesis These processes are much faster than what nature can do An overview of protein production using methanogens and Cyanobacteria bacteria Is published by a group called ALLFED in a paper by Juan Martinez.
Another very informative show. What are your thoughts on the Polaris delay? I think they need to develop a mars tug that could bring 4 star ships at a time. Then they could rotate them all together and create artificial gravity to reduce space sickness. What do you think ? Slowly adjust to mars gravity on the way there and earth gravity on the way back.
I’m just a licensed machinist with 14 years as a prototyper for JDSU and learned how to work with engineering to make impossible manufacturable. Really not that smart but still play around.
@@Jameson1776 The reason I thought it would be good to wind down slowly to mars gravity on the was to allow the bodies motor skills to adapt. I think they need space tug maybe could be nuclear powered and save all that valuable fuel on the starships. But you might be right. Maybe we need a few runs to figure it out. To see what is best.
If Ingenuity crashed into a tree, that would be something. The search for life off earth would be over. Then we could focus on finding intelligent life in the universe.
Hey Fraser, I was just introduced to Hopscotch - a channel of musical science videos for kids. If you haven't heard of the them I recommend the space songs compilation, well worth 15 minutes if you have them spare, i think youll love it
Question for the Q&A show, what was the reason the mars copter didn’t have lidar sensors to sense the distance to the ground? I imagine it’s just it was designed before drone technology advanced in the last 15 years but maybe there’s a more interesting answer. Lidar seems like a no brainer nowadays, if my phone can have it so should nasa.
15:00 Could the twin galaxy be a mirror image of the milky way? Is it possible that we observe this galaxy along the curvature of space, and see the childhood of our galaxy?
As you mentioned not all such events would be pointed directly at earth, but it does make me wonder how big of a cone solar flares make? Does the area vary by intensity? And what’s let’s say that we can’t a solar flare near the edge as opposed to directly aimed at us, how much does the intensity drop off the further you get from the center?
Question for Q/A: Why does running out of fuel has to mean the end for mission, e.g. Gaia? I would understand it, if it fell into the atmosphere, but that is not the case. It just drifts away uncontrolled. I would assume that we can get data out of it for as long as we can keep contact (radio or laser). We were receiving data from Voyager for decades and it is so far out. I would assume the same should be the case for Gaia. Is it a abandwidth issue? Or is fuel also needed for orienting it? I assume that is mostly or completely done by spinning wheels.
If the cost is ok, a refueling-station with several huuge fuel-tanksshould be parked in the Larange-point. Future spaceships would have a docking and go to the fuel-station, fill up and then go to their scientific positions. Like cars do on earth. Br
When JWST reaches its end of life, it will join Gaia in the center of the Lagrange point. How much room is there? This is a limited and valuable region. Shouldn't it be part of the plan to clean up after you are done?
I've got a case of getting old. However, that's all due to lighting. You can see the beam of light across the room, coming from sunlight. Sleep is normal for my current obsession on a new video game. :-)
The common sense restoration of Gaia is: 1… use starship to get a rescue ship into low earth orbit. (Low cost per pound to LEO) 2… the unmanned rescue ship locks onto GAIA and provides attitude control & thruster location control 3… the low acceleration rescue ship also propels GAIA to a much larger orbit around the Sun including gravity assists from Mars or Jupiter. This larger baseline will increase GAIA parallax distance measurements by an order of magnitude. 4… the rescue ship also provides upgraded antenna communication link to compensate for much longer transmission distances. 5… the rescue ship also provides much larger solar electric panels to compensate for weaker solar radiant energy per square meter.
For an advanced Martian drone to rely on vision alone is a bit frivolous. It should have one or preferably two more alternative methods of navigation, from radar to echolocation🤦♂
Hi Frasier, are you a person who allows your personal feelings for an individual to impact your opinion of an organization said person is associated with? I would like to believe any person, with influence on a group, would set aside personal feelings, positive or negative of associated individuals of an organization, and evaluate the organization on its performance alone. Thanks.
For all the Americans giggling for hours after the planet Uranus is mentioned, Gaia was his wife, and had him castrated, she got her sons, the titans to do the deed, something that learned Chronos an important lesson
Dark mater has no mass....... As DM doesn't exist....the EU theory explains wot the missing mass is and its action.... Occam's razor give this theory creedence
If Ingenuity had crashed into a tree, colonizing mars would be a lot easier.
Haha! No doubt. Haha...
Some day there will be telephone poles on Mars with sneakers hanging from the wires.
@@javaman4584 *Space sneakers. 😆
Your call to interview up-and-coming astronomers, this was the best 45 seconds on any show you did, ever. 90% of interviewees are interviewed frequently! This offer you make changes that, and this is Good 👍❤️
From “The Gaia Successor in 2021“ (Erik Høg 2021) on arxiv:
“ESA has now ranked the development of this mission so high that a launch about 2045 is quite probable.“
so only 21 years? lol
This is twice longer then GAIA lifetime, which is limited by fuel, cosmic radiation damage of silicon CCD, gyroscopes , micrometeorites, etc. I wish they manufactured a few GAIAs and launch one every few years to benefit from economy of scale.
@kamilZ2 I would love to see Gaia 2. Two space parallax telescopes at Jupiter's L4 and L5. Roughly 5 AU of parallax distance. And with two telescopes, you don't have to wait 6 months, it's instant. This was tested with New Horizons and an Earth telescope a few years ago, after "Ultima Thule," the space snowman. If I remember correctly, it was tested on Alpha Centaury.
The Europeans really do not fund their space program well at all.
@@kamilZ2 This is something I been hoping would be done for decades, e.g. also for Cassini, New Horizon, JWST, Hubble etc etc. I can't for the world understand why this is not done. All the construction and development are done after the first unit! Br
In a very early episode of Red Dwarf, Rimmer is trying (again) to pass his astro-navigation exams, to become an officer. The question he's working on is "What does the red spectrum tell us about Quasars?" As you might expect, he begins his answer the same way that a kid would begin a book report, for a book they didn't bother reading. When he's finished waffling, a look of confusion comes over him as he asks aloud "What the hell is a Quasar???"
When I first saw that episode, way back in the early 90s, it prompted me to try to answer Rimmer's question. I wanted to know what the hell a Quasar was. Unfortunately, I had no reliable method of discovering answers to such questions back then, so that quandary stayed with me for at least ten years, possibly longer!
Gods damn it!!! Now I wanna go and rewatch all 12 seasons and 2 movies of Red Dwarf!!
👍
🎶 It’s cold outside, there’s no kind of atmosphere 🎵
@@blacksmith67thanks, this is in my head now, and I'm not sorry about that ☺️
I've been rewatching it recently. Brilliant show.
8:31 "A billion here. A billion there. Pretty soon, you're talking about real money." (Senator Everett Dickson) LoL
Oh not GAIA😢 the astrometric bread and butter Mission❤
BTW, your interviews and the subjects and scientists you select are excellent. I greatly appreciate the knowledge, understanding and insight I have gained through watching them.
I continually learn _sooo_ much from this channel. He puts in full time hours on these productions and it's abundantly obvious. In my opinion it's one of the best space channels on the entire internet. Love it!
My husband spent the first half of his career studying trans-iron high energy cosmic rays. He leaned towards the super bubble theory, but I remember how giddy he was, as we sat in the NASA colloquium in 2017(?) for the multi-messenger observation of a binary neutron star merger. It was like he was suddenly seeing new possibilities for the science he loved so much. When he gets up tomorrow, I'll make sure he knows about new paper about neutron star merger flares as a trans iron cosmic ray origination. He's in aerospace now, but you never forget your first love. Thank you.
Yeah you do
Thanks for all the news, Fraser! 😊
Stay safe there with your family! 🖖😊
Gaia has been my favorite science platform. A real work horse.
'Rocinante'
Someone should have an online Wake for GAIA to memorialize the most impactful space telescope, ever.
I find it surprising that building another GAIA satellite is less expensive than designing it to be refueled.
A strap-on for Gaia...
Satellites like Gaia should be made in such a way that a servicing robot with supplies could be launched to resupply satellites. I'm actually surprised this isn't already being done.
There are companies working on developing and implementing the ability to refuel a space craft, they just have to be accepted by the agencies.
One of my high school classmates worked on the helicopter.
I'm sure he's devastated.
He should not be devastated, he should be incredibly proud. That little chopper astronomically over-performed.
How about an interview with a custodian at one of the major labs like LHC? I think it would be very cool to see about what kinds of mundane things are needed to keep those things running.
4:23 - We need GaiaNIR as soon as possible!
GaiaVNIR
As soon as the new Congress is sworn in find out who''s on the appropriate committees and get constituents to write the members arguing for U.S. funding to 'fast track' Gaia[V]NIR. Space science has almost no constituency, and a lot of its current advocates have, for better or worse, managed to burn some bridges. Anything you do will matter!
There will still be a lot of science done with Gaia data, and I think that includes Gaia data that has been collected but hasn't been fully analysed or calibrated yet, so science with the longest most precise measurements should still be coming, which is cool.
Fraser and team are the heroes we need.
Gaia is one of my all time favorite exciting missions as well! I would love to hear more about how such a vast amount of data is transmitted, stored, and analyzed - a topic applicable to the other space telescopes as well. Thanks for your superb science communication and awesome RUclips channel!
If Ingenuity managed to crash into a Martian tree, it would have been the first to discover extra-terrestrial life.
That'd be one tough tree. 😆
The Japanese lunar vehicle is going to have a big problem with door seals. The lunar regolith will tear those seals to shreds. Also the capsule will be coved with regolith as the astronauts bring in the dust. The problem can not be eliminated. Lunar regolith is a serious problem. 6:58
4:41 wanted for Astrometry: love child of GAIA + JWST
Cheaper to build a new Gia and launch it than to rescue Gia.
Which would be better: fly a mission to Lagrange Point 2 to catch and attach to Gaia or to send up a new version of Gaia with over a decade’s worth of technology improvements?
New GAIA with IR capability and, perhaps, greater resolution. This should be a collaborative mission between NASA, the ESA and the Chinese Space agency. I know that sounds radical....but it's really not..... ESA can run the project and the USA and China can contribute. It might be based on the mission model of MAUVE.
Hopefully Dragon Fly will not suffer the same fate as Ingenuity as it is flying over a featureless methane lake.
Well done, Gaia. Amazing craft and mission controllers.
Regarding Ingenuity. Good story on your drone crash theory NASA. Everyone already knows that the Sandstorm elementals got fed-up with the buzzy flying thing hovering over their home and snatched it out of the air. 🙄
Too bad we’re going to miss upcoming auroras here in the Pacific Northwest, due to the weather.
That would be Twilight Sparkle.🦄
When I die I want to be listening to one of your shows.
I want a Super Gaia! Two space near/mid infrared parallax telescopes orbiting at Jupiter's L4 and L5. That would roughly give 5 AU of parallax distance. Put a tight beam com laser on it, and an Epstein drive. Starship, New Glen, and SLS would take way too long. 😂
At time 12:50 - This explains the occasional anvils that still impact in remote desert regions.
So much GREAT information by Mr. Cain. Thank you 👍🙂✨
6:25 - We need Sea Dragon!
15:36 🦄
Too bad we can't send resupply-drones out to Perseverance. Maybe one big drone carrying many more 'standard sized ones' like before, or with 'standard drones as its motors' and the main ship being tons of battery and solar panels and maybe a tiny RTG for heat to keep the battery from freezing or whatever. It just heads in the direction that NASA sends it updates for every now and then so it can try to get to some area near the rover's path, and aside from that just 'fly wnw and don't run into anything on the way' to get to that general area. Yeah yeah yeah, I know there's more reasons than JUST that why it's unlikely, but I'd love if it could be done.
Maybe Jared Isaacman will volunteer to go fix it in a modified Dragon capture with a Mars class service module. He could fix Hubble on the way back. 👍🏼
OK, you asked for experts in relevant fields. So let’s discuss the production of food and space Making protein 16:00 from methane and ammonia
Also, making protein from carbon dioxide and hydrogen
And incidentally
Sugars can be derived without need for plants or photosynthesis - see Tobias ERB
And the Chinese have developed a synthesis of starch again without needing photosynthesis
These processes are much faster than what nature can do
An overview of protein production using methanogens and Cyanobacteria bacteria
Is published by a group called ALLFED in a paper by Juan Martinez.
Another very informative show. What are your thoughts on the Polaris delay? I think they need to develop a mars tug that could bring 4 star ships at a time. Then they could rotate them all together and create artificial gravity to reduce space sickness. What do you think ? Slowly adjust to mars gravity on the way there and earth gravity on the way back.
I’m just a licensed machinist with 14 years as a prototyper for JDSU and learned how to work with engineering to make impossible manufacturable. Really not that smart but still play around.
I would think if that could work keeping it at earth gravity the way there would be best. But on the way back yeah start low and build back.
@@Jameson1776 The reason I thought it would be good to wind down slowly to mars gravity on the was to allow the bodies motor skills to adapt. I think they need space tug maybe could be nuclear powered and save all that valuable fuel on the starships. But you might be right. Maybe we need a few runs to figure it out. To see what is best.
Hope you understand… not using a keyboard here lol
T.U.G. S. = Transport Universal Galleon Ship.
"like the carrington event" the paper describes something 100X larger.
My guys at U of I making us flatlanders look good! Way to go.
Thanks!
Great video. Question: What would a zero-g fire be like on the ISS? How would the fire behave and how would the astronauts put it out?
When Gaia first launched, they said it would detect thousands of exoplanets. How many exoplanets has Gaia actually detected?
thanks Fraser salute from Newmarket Ontario do you think Canada will ever get its own Space launch area anywhere in the country?
Absolutely, they're working on one in Nova Scotia now.
If Ingenuity crashed into a tree, that would be something. The search for life off earth would be over. Then we could focus on finding intelligent life in the universe.
Hey Fraser, I was just introduced to Hopscotch - a channel of musical science videos for kids. If you haven't heard of the them I recommend the space songs compilation, well worth 15 minutes if you have them spare, i think youll love it
Question for the Q&A show, what was the reason the mars copter didn’t have lidar sensors to sense the distance to the ground? I imagine it’s just it was designed before drone technology advanced in the last 15 years but maybe there’s a more interesting answer. Lidar seems like a no brainer nowadays, if my phone can have it so should nasa.
ingenuity crashing into a tree would have been the most staggering scientific discovery of the century.
It must have been their hope. Either you never crash your drone or you discover trees on Mars. Those are the only two possible outcomes.
Wha!? No! What a bummer...
My iPhone has a camera that can sense depth. And Xbox Kinect is a couple decades old. I’m surprised they don’t have that capability on Ingenuity.
Could they use any of the iss modules around or on the moon instead of crashing into earth?
Sabine Hossenfelder just published a video yesterday about super flares of the sun.
GAIA is going to be a big loss. You mention it ALL THE TIME
Guest request: Dr. Janusz Petkowski
Perhaps the drone sightings in New Jersey are Ingenuity's ghost
15:00 Could the twin galaxy be a mirror image of the milky way? Is it possible that we observe this galaxy along the curvature of space, and see the childhood of our galaxy?
As you mentioned not all such events would be pointed directly at earth, but it does make me wonder how big of a cone solar flares make? Does the area vary by intensity? And what’s let’s say that we can’t a solar flare near the edge as opposed to directly aimed at us, how much does the intensity drop off the further you get from the center?
Flares can also harm Earth-Mars spaceships.
Avrage flight time was about a minute and forty seconds over the first 70 flights
Most lenses seperate colors to some extent. I am guessing a grivitational lense does not do that?
Is it acceptable to call them (cosmic) rays if they are particles? Does the distinction between EM radiation and particles blur at near-light speeds?
It's just what they're called, but yeah, they're accelerated atoms.
19:28 I don't get the point of using nitrogen. You have to do it in a pressure chamber anyway and if you're there why not just use water?
What was Wolowitz doing on Jan 18 2024?
Question for Q/A: Why does running out of fuel has to mean the end for mission, e.g. Gaia? I would understand it, if it fell into the atmosphere, but that is not the case. It just drifts away uncontrolled. I would assume that we can get data out of it for as long as we can keep contact (radio or laser). We were receiving data from Voyager for decades and it is so far out. I would assume the same should be the case for Gaia. Is it a abandwidth issue? Or is fuel also needed for orienting it? I assume that is mostly or completely done by spinning wheels.
Voyager has an RTG
Gaia's mission depends completely on precise aiming. It can't do that without propellant.
Also 'drifting away' may risk a collision with other observatories at the Lagrange point, such as JWST
Has Gaia ever snapped a pic of JWST or Euclid either accidentally or on purpose?
Have you ever interviewed "Hello wonderful person."?
Yup, I did a fun episode with him and Joe Scott last year
If the cost is ok, a refueling-station with several huuge fuel-tanksshould be parked in the Larange-point. Future spaceships would have a docking and go to the fuel-station, fill up and then go to their scientific positions. Like cars do on earth. Br
You should interview Dr Becky youtuber a also PhD in astrophysics
We've chatted a few times in the past. :-)
The universe is a torus...
That early MW lookalike may be us!
🤔
Ate they gonna mine the moon? wouldnt that effect the Earths tides & life more and more?
good
When JWST reaches its end of life, it will join Gaia in the center of the Lagrange point. How much room is there? This is a limited and valuable region. Shouldn't it be part of the plan to clean up after you are done?
Do you get enough sleep, Fraser?
Your eyebags got worse :(
thank you for all the videos, great work!
I've got a case of getting old. However, that's all due to lighting. You can see the beam of light across the room, coming from sunlight. Sleep is normal for my current obsession on a new video game. :-)
@@frasercain what kind of game? 😊
@@frasercain Oh come on, you're a youngster. You've got at least 30 years more of doing this wonderful journalism!
The common sense restoration of Gaia is:
1… use starship to get a rescue ship into low earth orbit. (Low cost per pound to LEO)
2… the unmanned rescue ship locks onto GAIA and provides attitude control & thruster location control
3… the low acceleration rescue ship also propels GAIA to a much larger orbit around the Sun including gravity assists from Mars or Jupiter. This larger baseline will increase GAIA parallax distance measurements by an order of magnitude.
4… the rescue ship also provides upgraded antenna communication link to compensate for much longer transmission distances.
5… the rescue ship also provides much larger solar electric panels to compensate for weaker solar radiant energy per square meter.
This rescue would be the fraction of the cost of a new GAIA plus improve distance measurements 10 times.
For an advanced Martian drone to rely on vision alone is a bit frivolous. It should have one or preferably two more alternative methods of navigation, from radar to echolocation🤦♂
Algorithm! I’m actually going to watch this later when I can give it my full attention but for now, algorithm!
Meanwhile...
should we send some future astronaut to either fix ingenuity or just pick it upto p send back to some space museim.
Flying Martian Rovers
Love your videos dude. Keep up the good work.
But, how many grams is a trillion solor masses?
Clearly, you should take to flying your drones on Mars. :)
We're all going to die😮
You say you love Gaia, but we all know that your true loves are Nancy Grace Roman and Vera C. Rubin.
Wowie
Hi Frasier, are you a person who allows your personal feelings for an individual to impact your opinion of an organization said person is associated with? I would like to believe any person, with influence on a group, would set aside personal feelings, positive or negative of associated individuals of an organization, and evaluate the organization on its performance alone. Thanks.
My job is to report on things that happen in the realm of space and astronomy.
I still think it was a tree. Look closer.😅
My theory that it crashed while checking out some daisies
W
Tree? 😂
Äh.. "Larensche" Punkt? "Einfallsteichtum" "Schurkenplaneten"?
Lagrange point
@hive_indicator318 there is an ai based translation wich does not know specisl vocabulary@
For all the Americans giggling for hours after the planet Uranus is mentioned, Gaia was his wife, and had him castrated, she got her sons, the titans to do the deed, something that learned Chronos an important lesson
What makes you think only Americans giggle at Uranus?
@@bluesteel8376 - I thought it was their form of humour? Who else?
Wait till Americans learn Orion's origin story.
Hats off to Gaia. Get it? 'cause it looks like a hat . HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAha........ . Even the algorithm hates me now.
One of the folks closest to a celeb you have interviewed is Dr. Abi Loeb, and that guy is just not that interesting.
Dark mater has no mass....... As DM doesn't exist....the EU theory explains wot the missing mass is and its action.... Occam's razor give this theory creedence
The Voyagers had more redundancies built-in than Ingenuity.