The Europa Clipper is one of my projects! It is going to be a massive size - covering a basketball court when fully deployed. It is going to yield a lot of new science stuff that will help us understand our small part of the universe. Now Simon needs to do one on Titan (Saturn's moon) and how John's Hopkins APL is creating a helicopter to fly around that little rock! The project is called Dragonfly.
I’ll be that guy and say no astronaut will be landing there soon, possibly ever, because the radiation from the Jupiter’s equivalent of the Van Allen belts is deadly.
I have said it before but I will say it again I quite simply ADORE when Simon gets to geek out over space topics. The excitement and wonder is just so evident, and it gives me a great big smile every time! Also, I nearly aspirated my water three times in the course of the video at the unexpected humor, so good job on that as well!
I just imagine a bunch of European mermaids fighting each over aquatic lands, pausing to see a rover enter the ocean, only to go back to fighting each other.
@@TheAvenstar send millions into space, the people wasted and resources found will out weight each other. Our planet is just a speck in the whole. So many resources from billions of yrs.
Subnautica wasn't that scary; I just hit silent running whenever something big turned up, and went around slowly. The scariest part was 'oh shit I'm gonna die down here' when I got my Cyclops wedged Austin Powers style and had to get out and basically jump up and down on it in the prawn suit to try and dislodge it.
1:35 - Chapter 1 - Just the basic facts 6:05 - Chapter 2 - Moon enough and time 9:10 - Mid roll ads 10:40 - Chapter 3 - Let me play among the stars 14:05 - Chapter 4 - But not as we know it... 17:55 - Chapter 5 - Beyond the infinite - Chapter 6 -
I love bingeing on all of your channels, but my favorite is Geographics!! I try to catch on some I've missed while showering, and today I almost blinded myself with soap when you said, 'Why do planetary scientists get a stirring in their pants every time they think about........' I love your sense of humor and the way you just casually drop bombs without batting an eye so Thank you, Simon!!! Thank you for teaching me new and interesting stuff about all different kinds of things!! With you the phrase 'learn something new every day' is an understatement!!
The best thing about potential life on Europa is it could easily be Leviathan sized, to the point we should expect to find stuff that large, cold water combined with low gravity and billions of years of stability
Clovis Bray sends his regards. I can’t believe Simon didn’t cover the vex portal to the 2082 volantis star forge, such a defining feature of Europa once you’ve passed the wreckage of the Deep Stone Crypt…. Shame.
When I watched 2010 as a nine year old many moons ago (sorry), Europa has always fascinated me. Love to see a base on the surface which drills through 15km of ice with underwater exploratory subs lurking through the kinetic depths to find life
Great Video Simon; The Europa Clipper mission definately deserves a lander follw-up mission, surely we need to know definitively whether Europa has life on it to any scale, or whether its just a huge snowball. The findings should prove to be very interesting.
God, I LOVE THESE SPACE VIDEOS. The emptiness, the distance, the sheer impossibility of it yet the HOPE is there! Thank you Simon and the team for sparking my interest in such a beautiful and mystical world that is our universe 🤩🤩🤩🤩🤩
The likely similarity of the under ice environment to volcanic vents on our ocean floor, screams the possibility of life. I'm old enough to remember when it was widely believed that the ocean floor would be devoid of life and certainly devoid of ecosystems. Then when the first UAVs actually visited volcanic sites on the ocean floor, everyone was astounded to see rich, moderately complex ecosystems. We really need to get under Europas ice - not an easy mission by any means. Personally, I've just got a gut feeling there is life there.
As a Dutchman I was wondering if an iceskating robot would be possible on Europa, but I am afraid that ice is as slippery as concrete at those temperatures.
This is stuff I love hearing Simon report on! As opposed to which authoritarian ruler put the most people through a woodchipper who failed to show enough loyalty.
By the time the Clipper arrives... Science may have advanced to the level where... wait for it... wait for it... that Simon may again have... Hair !! Simply amazing !! Love ya Sir !!...
its on my bucket list too, but i dont know if we are gonna make it, friend.. Our only hope might be emerging from cyro-hibernation 500 years from now, after choosing to not die upon our natural deaths and going into that deep, cold sleep, while the millenials figure out how to beat aging and death.
If there’s any aquatic life under there, it definitely would be the octopus lol. There was actually a thesis / paper put out a few years ago claiming that octopi came from space and it had some legitimate points.
Simon, I think that Squarespace should provide you with a fresh sales pitch. The current one has been running for so long and has become so familiar that the mind automatically tunes it out. If Squarespace can't improve itself then that casts doubt on whether they can improve anything else.
Simon I really loved this video. We need to explore Europa using a probe named the "Whistler Probe". This would be the ultimate honor for you Simon. And you can not say the "Whistler Probe" does not have a great sounding name.
Definitely the best places to look outside the earth for definitive proof after the recent asteroids surveys samples and various martian probe data that is.
This, the segment on Planet 9 and the other space-centric YTmentaries on this channel COULD go to a separate channel. Say, Astrographics? Just a thought. These are really enjoyable 😊😊
I love how a little bit of the Brain Blaze is sneaking into Simon's references on his other challenges. It gives the other channels a bit more personality.
When looking at those potentially inhabitable planets, would it make sense to equip the probe with instruments to spot other probes which landed there before? How likely is it that we are the only ones interested in such planets? If we are able to pull off such missions so early in our development, other intelligent species, dead or alive, but further developed, would have the same capability (even from way far away). Imagine finding bacteria and whatever on Europa and missing out on a probe or probes of other intelligent species....
Well once you've gotten to a level that you're easily sending probes to the far reaches of space, you've probably encountered innumerable from of microbial life. So they would probably be more interested in more developed forms of life and not actively searching for microbial ones. And I'm also guessing that any probe they deployed wouldn't leave any discernable trace behind, on the small chance its been there in the first place. And this is also ignoring the factor of time. Assuming it had been there, and had left a trace, that would have to survive over what period of time? Decades? Centuries? Millenias?
@4:38 The mere fact that liquid water shoots out of geysers proves it has without a shadow of any doubt a subsurface ocean. @15:05 It is also speculated that life on Earth initially formed near hydrothermal vents. It's amazing to think about the variety of complex life that may exist in Europa's subsurface ocean. That dream crusher has no effect on me he is just unimaginative which is unsuitable for a scientist.
Absolutely fascinating that we have only been launching objects into space for exploration purposes over the last 50 odd years. Look at how much humans have learned about our solar system and galaxy in that time. Now think what we will learn in the next 50, 100 and more? Very exciting, to me at least.
Another feature of Europa that makes it really intriguing from an astrobiology perspective is that radiation from Jupiter has oxidized its surface, meaning that it has oxygen (and sulfate) trapped in its ice. If that oxygen made it into the subsurface ocean through mechanisms similar to plate tectonics (thought to cause some of the cracks on Europa’s surface) it would definitely increase the possibility of life existing inside Europa.
Until we find out about Europas simple and/ or complex lifeforms if at all. We can play Barotrauma with all the lovely lifeforms ripping and infesting humans trying to fare in uboats/ sub-marines between the stations situated in the upper crust of Europa. Also you should do some collabs with the VSauceman himself. You are similar yet different! Glass clad beardy baldies for science!
Just recently captured Jupiter and it's four moons with my Canon R8 and a 400mm lens. I had to learn about all the moons. It's pretty mind blowing all the cool things about the moons. Also Just seeing the moons myself was pretty unreal.
American : finally! im on europa! now time to claim this mo- Europeans : oh hello! welcome to this official european space colony! we have some fries if you want!
Any organization the size of the DOD would see most of it's funds laundered and funneled away just like our military does. In a way, constrained funding begets creativity and innovation whereas near infinite funds would see many problems brute forced and never efficiently solved. NASA still needs more funding, without a doubt, but giving them trillions would only get us very weak innovation and loads of useless bureaucracy just like our military
Now: A) make this a midterm campaign issue. B) Write your representatives! Who's starting the petition?! We need a happy project like this!!!! 🌌💜 Simon & Team!!!
Yes. There’s dregs, vandals, shanks, tracer shanks, servitors, marauders and these brigs that will shred you if you are low level. They got loot drops though.
Great video as always. Another thing from what I understand that Europa has going for it is that the sun rays that hit the ice can split the Hydrogen and Oxygen from each other and the gravity is strong enough to keep the Oxygen but week enough to let the Hydrogen escape. Because Oxygen is relatively heavy compared to Hydrogen. So the ocean is probably Oxygen rich as well on Europa.
After 4.2 billion years, anything that evolved there would have time to become crabs, the perfect body form. Of course, one species is probably a super-intelligent giant crab just waiting to be released from its watery prison to destroy all non-crab life forms in the solar system but it would be awesome!
The gravitational force of that system deforms the whole structure of the moons, not only the surface, I think. This is in a way like bending or deforming metal, which gets warm when you do so.
There's also no guarantee that something won't go wrong during that 6 year flight to Europa. Heck, it's got to make it off of Earth first and though sending probes has been more successful than launching spacecraft. There's always (ALWAYS) a chance that it doesn't make it out of our atmosphere. I look forward to the probes. The fact that Europe and the U.S. are sending probes doubles the chances of getting usable information.
NASA has been talking about the mission to Europa since at least 1995. I watched a documentary in 1995 that said all this plus showed how they would launch a rover or something to the surface then drill through the ice to retrieve samples of the water beneath. So in almost 30 years ....... nothing.....
Aquatic creatures in Europa's ocean don't have eyes like creatures on Earth. They may have organs that could detect infrared light that isn't on the visible spectrum. Another possibility is that like some of Earth's aquatic creatures, some of them may have organs that produce distinct infrared light that lures their preys like that of the anglerfish. Also, they may have a shark's hunting mechanism that detects blood scent from miles away. Lastly, as they don't need sunlight to survive, their bodies may not need bones rich in calcium for skeletons. Like those of sharks, their skeletons may be composed of buoyant cartilages, not bones.
I'd love to see a probe/drill go to Europa! However, there is already SO much we don't even know about our OWN deepest depths of underwater vastness on Earth! If there is oceanic life on Europa, I'm willing to bet that by this point it probably is similar to some of the crazy-looking, alien-like fish that dwell in the depths of our oceans! I also wonder if we did drill through the ice and went down there, how would the underwater environment react with a foreign object (bacteria)... 🤔
Simon.. there are two things we need to adress here: A) You effectively promised a re-visit of this subject in 15 years. You will be kept to this promise. B) You forgot to use your own Beard Blaze product today and your bead looks like an electro shock. You, as the supreme leader of the DocumentaryTube tribe, is expected to have an outright glorious beard at all times. Please correct this omission :P
Check out Squarespace: squarespace.com/GEOGRAPHICS for 10% off on your first purchase.
In terms of moons, we still have :
- *Jupiter* : Ganymede , Callisto , Io
- *Saturn* : Titan, Rhea, Iapetus, Dione, Tethys
- *Uranus* : Titania, Oberon, Umbriel, Ariel , Miranda
- *Neptune*: Triton
@@ignitionfrn2223
AkA every location in "The Expanse".
I think it's arguable that Europa is a planet
@@Thehomelessathlete
A planet orbits a star.
A moon orbits a planet.
Straightforward classification.
So which one of you is Europa?
Barotrauma and Destiny have taught me two things about Europa: Underneath its icy surface awaits beauty and EXTREME AMOUNTS OF HORROR
It’s just going to be wet and dark. I can go see my ex girlfriend for that experience 😂
Also loot for those who can claim it 💪🏻
No, all you will find is water
The Europa Clipper is one of my projects! It is going to be a massive size - covering a basketball court when fully deployed. It is going to yield a lot of new science stuff that will help us understand our small part of the universe.
Now Simon needs to do one on Titan (Saturn's moon) and how John's Hopkins APL is creating a helicopter to fly around that little rock! The project is called Dragonfly.
Cool. Glad the USA's monies going to science. Good luck to the Team. v
Awesome keep it real pal best o luck👍
That is so epic!!
Both projects sound awesome.
Wow, i didnt know there were basketball courts on Europa. 😱 science is magical. 🤗
When astronauts first land on Europa:
*Deep Stone Crypt starts playing*
At least the astronaut will hear something nice when they land.
I’ll be that guy and say no astronaut will be landing there soon, possibly ever, because the radiation from the Jupiter’s equivalent of the Van Allen belts is deadly.
Nice outer wilds profile pic
@@jaybee9269 pretty much the only reason we haven't gone past the moon, shielding is expensive!!!
@@Thros1 >> Indeed! Trying to remember the name of some novels I read which covers the issue pretty well. (I’m old now, lol.)
I have said it before but I will say it again
I quite simply ADORE when Simon gets to geek out over space topics. The excitement and wonder is just so evident, and it gives me a great big smile every time!
Also, I nearly aspirated my water three times in the course of the video at the unexpected humor, so good job on that as well!
Stop
Imagine the disappointment when we go to Europa only to find Europeans
I just imagine a bunch of European mermaids fighting each over aquatic lands, pausing to see a rover enter the ocean, only to go back to fighting each other.
They would be Europans, not Europeans.
Europans be like: Thor?, Poseidon??, I guess you guys like doing our cosplays 😎👀
Europans!!!
The European union keep them from wars. Only between europeans tho.
I would rather fund twenty Europa landers than one more stupid war that has no purpose.
Cool it with the anti-semitism Bob.
Bob, I concur mate.
War is good. It helps keep the population in check. God told me to tell you that.
...why?
@@TheAvenstar send millions into space, the people wasted and resources found will out weight each other. Our planet is just a speck in the whole. So many resources from billions of yrs.
"There lies a volume of water bigger than all the oceans in our world hidden beneath the ice" *Subnautica Flashbacks*
Subnautica wasn't that scary; I just hit silent running whenever something big turned up, and went around slowly.
The scariest part was 'oh shit I'm gonna die down here' when I got my Cyclops wedged Austin Powers style and had to get out and basically jump up and down on it in the prawn suit to try and dislodge it.
1:35 - Chapter 1 - Just the basic facts
6:05 - Chapter 2 - Moon enough and time
9:10 - Mid roll ads
10:40 - Chapter 3 - Let me play among the stars
14:05 - Chapter 4 - But not as we know it...
17:55 - Chapter 5 - Beyond the infinite
- Chapter 6 -
Midroll ad ends at around 10:41
@@rednightfire2655 EAD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I love bingeing on all of your channels, but my favorite is Geographics!! I try to catch on some I've missed while showering, and today I almost blinded myself with soap when you said, 'Why do planetary scientists get a stirring in their pants every time they think about........' I love your sense of humor and the way you just casually drop bombs without batting an eye so Thank you, Simon!!! Thank you for teaching me new and interesting stuff about all different kinds of things!! With you the phrase 'learn something new every day' is an understatement!!
The best thing about potential life on Europa is it could easily be Leviathan sized, to the point we should expect to find stuff that large, cold water combined with low gravity and billions of years of stability
Until some genius decides to bring that life back here to Earth.
We should most definitely not expect any of that. Not unless you want to be extremely dissapointed.
I absolutely love these space themed geographics vids, thank you for this!
Clovis Bray sends his regards. I can’t believe Simon didn’t cover the vex portal to the 2082 volantis star forge, such a defining feature of Europa once you’ve passed the wreckage of the Deep Stone Crypt…. Shame.
I might live to become an exo before then.
I gotta buy all the destiny fans here a beer lol
Thank you
When I watched 2010 as a nine year old many moons ago (sorry), Europa has always fascinated me. Love to see a base on the surface which drills through 15km of ice with underwater exploratory subs lurking through the kinetic depths to find life
I'm always in awe of the vastness of outer space. The difference in time to Mars vs. to Jupiter makes ones mind explode.
Glad you mentioned David Brown's fantastic book, The Mission. A MUST READ for anyone interested in the Europa Clipper.
Great Video Simon; The Europa Clipper mission definately deserves a lander follw-up mission, surely we need to know definitively whether Europa has life on it to any scale, or whether its just a huge snowball. The findings should prove to be very interesting.
Destiny 2 Players: *"Darkness..."*
Haha you beat me to it ^-^
Luckily for us Simon had time to explain.
People who play Destiny 2 are a myth
Screw Europa. Shatter Dive is BS! Lol.
I came to this video just to see this sort of comment.
God, I LOVE THESE SPACE VIDEOS. The emptiness, the distance, the sheer impossibility of it yet the HOPE is there! Thank you Simon and the team for sparking my interest in such a beautiful and mystical world that is our universe 🤩🤩🤩🤩🤩
God,I know your all excited and all but the earth is flat...whomp whomp whomp whaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa.😔
@@MAD_Villain1981 it’s actually a cube
I was going to comment on this video, but after reading yours I felt there is nothing left to say. I feel the same way.
I was gonna reply to these replies, but if you can't say anything nice, then don't say anything at all, so I won't.
The likely similarity of the under ice environment to volcanic vents on our ocean floor, screams the possibility of life. I'm old enough to remember when it was widely believed that the ocean floor would be devoid of life and certainly devoid of ecosystems. Then when the first UAVs actually visited volcanic sites on the ocean floor, everyone was astounded to see rich, moderately complex ecosystems. We really need to get under Europas ice - not an easy mission by any means. Personally, I've just got a gut feeling there is life there.
Oops I meant Unmanned Submersible Vehicles, not UAVs
No worries, we knew what you meant, dude :-)
Finally got a chance to watch this. Your scriptwriter is awesome! Thanks so much.
The House of Salvation send their regards.
House of light will stand forever!
hello from an Awoken Hunter
@@aceundead4750 hello from a human Titan.
Greetings from an Exo Hunter
Greetings from a Human Hunter, Awoken Titan and Exo Warlock.
“A perverted leer” I’m cryinggg 😂😂😂
As a Dutchman I was wondering if an iceskating robot would be possible on Europa, but I am afraid that ice is as slippery as concrete at those temperatures.
That cat sneezing apocalypse was absolutely, undeniably brilliant.
The shot of Extremophiles did not show bacteria, but cute & cuddly Tardigrades.
They are Extremophiles tho
Watch your videos everyday. RUclips wouldn’t be the same without you! Legend!
he is 70% of youtube by now, so you have no choice but watching his videos
@@kabukimanindahouse LOL, also true
This is stuff I love hearing Simon report on! As opposed to which authoritarian ruler put the most people through a woodchipper who failed to show enough loyalty.
Right? I love Simon and the team but the top whatever on every channel and the incessant leaning on dictators and murderers is getting a little old.
@@StrangeTerror it's what gets the most views so of course they'll do more
@@StrangeTerror I quiet enjoying learning about those topics Simon has millions of followers and tries to cater to all of them
@@muzzer5327 Oh of course. Come on man I know how RUclips works. Criticism however, is a key part of development.
@@StrangeTerror the dictators existed, and still exist. And are still insanely important
I've always been a space science geek, and Simon's delivery of the video's final paragraphs literally gave me goosebumps.
"the planetary equivalent of sneezing germs all over your neighbor" - i was laughing so hard i had to stop the video!
the cat sneeze shortly after that was amazing too. 😁
By the time the Clipper arrives... Science may have advanced to the level where... wait for it... wait for it... that Simon may again have... Hair !! Simply amazing !! Love ya Sir !!...
I hope I live to see the day we drill beneath the icy crust of this damn moon. I wanna see alien fish!
Europa Report time!!!
You will probably be disappointed
@@Gamefreak924 just, let us dream man. 🙏
its on my bucket list too, but i dont know if we are gonna make it, friend.. Our only hope might be emerging from cyro-hibernation 500 years from now, after choosing to not die upon our natural deaths and going into that deep, cold sleep, while the millenials figure out how to beat aging and death.
If there’s any aquatic life under there, it definitely would be the octopus lol. There was actually a thesis / paper put out a few years ago claiming that octopi came from space and it had some legitimate points.
“All these worlds are yours, except Europa.
Attempt no landing there.
Use them together. Use them in peace.”
Sorry, I don't listen to fictional alien creatures. I say we exploit the F out of Europa.
Thanks so much for posting this - such an interesting moon.
2:37 He acknowledged. Known I need a side by side colab just to be certain... 🤣😉
Imagine preferring the barren, dusty, dead place over the one that could maybe possibly have space whales smh
Finding life is interesting but it doesn't have any use for human life.
On other hand Mars is important for our future.
@@lunaticranger6532 need to create a moon base for space ships that will make travel MUCH EASIER
Simon, I think that Squarespace should provide you with a fresh sales pitch. The current one has been running for so long and has become so familiar that the mind automatically tunes it out. If Squarespace can't improve itself then that casts doubt on whether they can improve anything else.
I read the words “life”, and “moon”. I automatically expected Enceladus.
Europa works too
Amazing writing and excecution! Loved this one!
Simon I really loved this video. We need to explore Europa using a probe named the "Whistler Probe". This would be the ultimate honor for you Simon. And you can not say the "Whistler Probe" does not have a great sounding name.
You should cover Io next. Its covered in active volcanoes and is honestly pretty awesome
You’re out of control .
Loved these moons since I was a kid!! And I remembered all the names :p
Definitely the best places to look outside the earth for definitive proof after the recent asteroids surveys samples and various martian probe data that is.
Can’t wait to see the deep stone crypt
This, the segment on Planet 9 and the other space-centric YTmentaries on this channel COULD go to a separate channel. Say, Astrographics? Just a thought. These are really enjoyable 😊😊
Agreed 👍
This man already has too many channels lmao
I love how a little bit of the Brain Blaze is sneaking into Simon's references on his other challenges. It gives the other channels a bit more personality.
Ok, but now I need to ask...
Can it support leviathan class predators?
For years scientists have wondered, is there intelligent life on earth?
Sonny: "...no."
@@aceundead4750 you beat me to it
"The search continues..."
Too soon to tell.
Only when I'm on holiday here hahaha
When looking at those potentially inhabitable planets, would it make sense to equip the probe with instruments to spot other probes which landed there before? How likely is it that we are the only ones interested in such planets? If we are able to pull off such missions so early in our development, other intelligent species, dead or alive, but further developed, would have the same capability (even from way far away). Imagine finding bacteria and whatever on Europa and missing out on a probe or probes of other intelligent species....
Well once you've gotten to a level that you're easily sending probes to the far reaches of space, you've probably encountered innumerable from of microbial life. So they would probably be more interested in more developed forms of life and not actively searching for microbial ones. And I'm also guessing that any probe they deployed wouldn't leave any discernable trace behind, on the small chance its been there in the first place. And this is also ignoring the factor of time. Assuming it had been there, and had left a trace, that would have to survive over what period of time? Decades? Centuries? Millenias?
If their probes can make it to Europa they can probably make it to Earth though right......
You should do a video explaining why so many Sci-Fi writers think Ganymede is a good place for a colony.
Its painful knowing how slow exploration of our solar system is. I want to know whats under that ice nowwwwwwww 😑
@4:38 The mere fact that liquid water shoots out of geysers proves it has without a shadow of any doubt a subsurface ocean. @15:05 It is also speculated that life on Earth initially formed near hydrothermal vents. It's amazing to think about the variety of complex life that may exist in Europa's subsurface ocean. That dream crusher has no effect on me he is just unimaginative which is unsuitable for a scientist.
The optimism of still being around doing these videos in 15 years is a great prospect to think of as a fan lol...please be around in 15 years
14:08. You've watched "Inglorious Basterds" as well! lol
Absolutely fascinating that we have only been launching objects into space for exploration purposes over the last 50 odd years. Look at how much humans have learned about our solar system and galaxy in that time. Now think what we will learn in the next 50, 100 and more? Very exciting, to me at least.
Simon - you should totally do a April Fools swap with that other guy, read each other's scripts and insert all the standard quirks and mannerisms.
I haven’t seen VSauce dude in a few years
Another feature of Europa that makes it really intriguing from an astrobiology perspective is that radiation from Jupiter has oxidized its surface, meaning that it has oxygen (and sulfate) trapped in its ice. If that oxygen made it into the subsurface ocean through mechanisms similar to plate tectonics (thought to cause some of the cracks on Europa’s surface) it would definitely increase the possibility of life existing inside Europa.
Until we find out about Europas simple and/ or complex lifeforms if at all. We can play Barotrauma with all the lovely lifeforms ripping and infesting humans trying to fare in uboats/ sub-marines between the stations situated in the upper crust of Europa. Also you should do some collabs with the VSauceman himself. You are similar yet different! Glass clad beardy baldies for science!
Simon replies to Felix’s: _Who is this, budget Vsauce?”_
Why did Simon post a video of himself when talking about V-sause Michael?
Saturn's moon enceladus deserves a separate video
Simon, I bet you can't do a biographics video about Uranus without laughing or cracking a smile. 😂
“VSauce! Simon, here - !”
It's really hard not to get my hopes up for this
Ugh imagine the incredible bioluminescence in that deep water ocean world. 😍😍😍😍
Whistler: is there hair on Simon's frozen head ?
Thankyou Simon and team I appreciate your support.
Regards K.Sean.Fraser
Now you gotta check out Destiny 2's Deep Stone Crypt RAID, specifically the space walk.
Just recently captured Jupiter and it's four moons with my Canon R8 and a 400mm lens. I had to learn about all the moons. It's pretty mind blowing all the cool things about the moons. Also Just seeing the moons myself was pretty unreal.
i'd love to go fishing on Europa.
Yay! More space places in geographics please!! 🥰🥰🥰
Let's get this trending to get the Lander Mission in the spotlight!
American : finally! im on europa! now time to claim this mo-
Europeans : oh hello! welcome to this official european space colony! we have some fries if you want!
damn imagine if NASA was given the amount of money the military gets every year we would have space colonies by now
Or at least Plasmobuicks! Where's our Jetsons flying car?
Nah bro, we need more $13 billion aircraft carriers
No, "They" would have space colonies.
Any organization the size of the DOD would see most of it's funds laundered and funneled away just like our military does. In a way, constrained funding begets creativity and innovation whereas near infinite funds would see many problems brute forced and never efficiently solved. NASA still needs more funding, without a doubt, but giving them trillions would only get us very weak innovation and loads of useless bureaucracy just like our military
The reason we don't is because we aren't allowed to
Now: A) make this a midterm campaign issue. B) Write your representatives! Who's starting the petition?!
We need a happy project like this!!!! 🌌💜 Simon & Team!!!
I never saw the correlation with Vsauce. Now I see it
Hopefully puts an end to people pointing out this irrelevant fact. Unlikely, though.
WAAAAUW this episode is well written ! Spot on ! :)
Yes. There’s dregs, vandals, shanks, tracer shanks, servitors, marauders and these brigs that will shred you if you are low level. They got loot drops though.
Great video as always. Another thing from what I understand that Europa has going for it is that the sun rays that hit the ice can split the Hydrogen and Oxygen from each other and the gravity is strong enough to keep the Oxygen but week enough to let the Hydrogen escape. Because Oxygen is relatively heavy compared to Hydrogen. So the ocean is probably Oxygen rich as well on Europa.
Could you cover the Battle of Hampton roads? Its where ironclad warships fought each other for the first time in history
Well, thank you Mr. Culberson! At the very least, I appreciate the effort.
After 4.2 billion years, anything that evolved there would have time to become crabs, the perfect body form. Of course, one species is probably a super-intelligent giant crab just waiting to be released from its watery prison to destroy all non-crab life forms in the solar system but it would be awesome!
Mm yes, the eternal question: go back to Monkey, or evolve to Crab!
here is one "long perverted lear" im sorry Jupiter for learing pervertedly at your moon. And thank you Simon's author for the good laugh.
Biographics deep dive on Clovis Brey?
Greatest Question: Is there life on Europa?
Second Greatest: Does it taste good?
Exo-geographics! Love these
The gravitational force of that system deforms the whole structure of the moons, not only the surface, I think. This is in a way like bending or deforming metal, which gets warm when you do so.
Next channel: astrographics
i would honestly love that
Now there's talk that Ceres has more water than Earth & it's even closer
There's also no guarantee that something won't go wrong during that 6 year flight to Europa. Heck, it's got to make it off of Earth first and though sending probes has been more successful than launching spacecraft. There's always (ALWAYS) a chance that it doesn't make it out of our atmosphere. I look forward to the probes. The fact that Europe and the U.S. are sending probes doubles the chances of getting usable information.
yes, but launchers are pretty reliable these days.
Excellent video. Very interesting.
Good video 👍
Too Bad everyones on Savathuns throne world! Do that one next! 😊
The amount of Destiny comments on this video is legit lmao
NASA has been talking about the mission to Europa since at least 1995. I watched a documentary in 1995 that said all this plus showed how they would launch a rover or something to the surface then drill through the ice to retrieve samples of the water beneath. So in almost 30 years ....... nothing.....
I know. It’s such a shame too
Vsauce has nothing on Simon... allegedly.
Isn't that just another Simon channel?
Aquatic creatures in Europa's ocean don't have eyes like creatures on Earth. They may have organs that could detect infrared light that isn't on the visible spectrum. Another possibility is that like some of Earth's aquatic creatures, some of them may have organs that produce distinct infrared light that lures their preys like that of the anglerfish. Also, they may have a shark's hunting mechanism that detects blood scent from miles away. Lastly, as they don't need sunlight to survive, their bodies may not need bones rich in calcium for skeletons. Like those of sharks, their skeletons may be composed of buoyant cartilages, not bones.
Damn this destiny 2 lore goes pretty deep
I'd love to see a probe/drill go to Europa! However, there is already SO much we don't even know about our OWN deepest depths of underwater vastness on Earth! If there is oceanic life on Europa, I'm willing to bet that by this point it probably is similar to some of the crazy-looking, alien-like fish that dwell in the depths of our oceans! I also wonder if we did drill through the ice and went down there, how would the underwater environment react with a foreign object (bacteria)... 🤔
Do Ganymede next!
Simon.. there are two things we need to adress here:
A) You effectively promised a re-visit of this subject in 15 years. You will be kept to this promise.
B) You forgot to use your own Beard Blaze product today and your bead looks like an electro shock. You, as the supreme leader of the DocumentaryTube tribe, is expected to have an outright glorious beard at all times. Please correct this omission :P
I think you mean beard 😜
@@John15293 Ducking autocorrect! :P