Scientists Discover Planets More Habitable Than Earth

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  • Опубликовано: 19 май 2023
  • Scientists Discover Planets More Habitable Than Earth
    ► Subscribe: goo.gl/r5jd1F
    Just about 30 years ago, we didn’t have any scientific proof of a planet outside our solar system. Today, thanks to advances in technology and scientific research, we've discovered over 5,300 exoplanets - alien worlds that are out there waiting to be explored.
    At first, these discoveries mostly involved large gas giants, but as our capabilities have expanded, we've started to uncover smaller, Earth-like exoplanets. Scientists have already found more than 50 exoplanets with masses similar to Earth, and over 800 worlds with radius less than one half times that of Earth.
    We don’t know of many such planets orbiting in the habitable zone of their parent stars - where the conditions are just right to support life. But that's already starting to change.
    As our search for habitable planets continues, we're beginning to discover entire planetary systems with more than one potentially habitable world. And we already know about at least one such system in our cosmic neighborhood.
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Комментарии • 7 тыс.

  • @SipOfScripture
    @SipOfScripture 10 месяцев назад +6003

    Crazy we're able to confidently describe planets that are lightyears away, yet we don't even know what lurks in the deepest parts of our own oceans.

    • @manoadamro1768
      @manoadamro1768 10 месяцев назад +873

      tbh It makes perfect sense. You can use a telescope to see though the vacuum of space, but you can't do the same with the ocean, you actually have to go and explore it all inch by inch and building things that can withstand the pressure at the bottom of the ocean is incredibly difficult.

    • @dreamerzyx
      @dreamerzyx 10 месяцев назад +503

      I don't think the word "confidently" is the word I'd use. Lot's of "possibilities" and "uncertains" thrown in there. They don't really know.

    • @dreamerzyx
      @dreamerzyx 10 месяцев назад

      @@manoadamro1768 They aren't sure about any of it. An alien civilization could look at our solar system from afar and surmise that Venus and Mars are "possibly" habitable because they're in the "goldilocks zone", but we all know they aren't.

    • @missmarasmenstrualmuffmunc2085
      @missmarasmenstrualmuffmunc2085 10 месяцев назад +95

      ​@@manoadamro1768that's not how that works. They analyze the light from the planets star that comes through its atmosphere because different compounds will absorb different wavelengths of light.

    • @noserly
      @noserly 10 месяцев назад +88

      We know all we need to about the oceans. That’s just a thing people say, that we don’t , because it sounds interesting and thoughtful. It’s also a thing people who want grant money say.

  • @HombreWithAnOmbre
    @HombreWithAnOmbre 11 месяцев назад +2919

    Imagine living in a solar system where there's 4 habitable planets and people travel between them on holiday or immigrate from one to another for a better life

    • @sirbarnabyst.johntoffingto9017
      @sirbarnabyst.johntoffingto9017 11 месяцев назад

      . . . and they're stupid enough to go to war with each other on all of them!

    • @ge2623
      @ge2623 11 месяцев назад

      Well, if there's immigration, I say build a wall between them.

    • @robanderson473
      @robanderson473 11 месяцев назад +139

      That would be neat, eh. I often wonder about those sorts of things myself. One day I s'pose but when that time comes we'd have been pushing up daisies for a good while! But hey ho, it's still a nice thought all the same.

    • @marklalonde7996
      @marklalonde7996 11 месяцев назад +273

      pretty sure there would be piracy and war

    • @didierduplantier8359
      @didierduplantier8359 11 месяцев назад +369

      It would just means 4 more planets for human to pollute and destroy

  • @tristen1499
    @tristen1499 7 месяцев назад +153

    Crazy thing to me is that we’re seeing these planets that are millions of light years away. Meaning that were seeing them from a million years before the time it actually is. For all we know, now they could be red fiery planets.

    • @alisonmurry7439
      @alisonmurry7439 4 месяца назад +7

      ahahahah. totally by the time we reach there its a fireball

    • @anirudhhattangadi3534
      @anirudhhattangadi3534 Месяц назад +11

      No hundreds or thousands of trillions of kms is not millions of light years

    • @amper-sand
      @amper-sand Месяц назад +10

      Our entire galaxy is about 100,000ly across. We are not seeing planets millions of light years away as that would be far far beyond our current technical capabilities.

    • @ericcomfort6228
      @ericcomfort6228 Месяц назад +2

      1 light year = six trillion miles

    • @MrKbtor2
      @MrKbtor2 Месяц назад +10

      dozens of light years

  • @TheEnigmaUniverse-vt2pm
    @TheEnigmaUniverse-vt2pm 4 месяца назад +6

    I hope this channel grows and stays around a long time. I'm sick with Covid and am having the worst time sleeping. This is fascinating and relaxing enough to distract me from being cranky and ill. ❤

    • @soaktinbleech1106
      @soaktinbleech1106 4 месяца назад

      Stay inside and get vitamins, we don't want that stuff to spread again

  • @Bodenathaniel
    @Bodenathaniel 9 месяцев назад +1040

    It's actually absurd to think we're alone in the universe.

    • @BestCarMedia
      @BestCarMedia 8 месяцев назад +90

      Blows my mind everytime i think about it. How tf our earth function so perfectly and we have yet to come across other life in space…

    • @lashonnmurray2762
      @lashonnmurray2762 8 месяцев назад +57

      We have no idea, there are planets that we can't even see. We can only go so far so we have no idea.

    • @ijustbevibin0425
      @ijustbevibin0425 8 месяцев назад +11

      @@BestCarMediashit I think we have already on some low key shit

    • @ivayloivanov3744
      @ivayloivanov3744 8 месяцев назад +48

      nope. we are alone

    • @Nikolai-nv4rq
      @Nikolai-nv4rq 8 месяцев назад +5

      Lol maybe that's where they will send the frozen IVF babies to be raised by the new androids.

  • @shaanchaudhry5719
    @shaanchaudhry5719 9 месяцев назад +738

    The more I see videos like this, the more I’m starting to become convinced that humans may not be able to survive somewhere else even with relatively habitable conditions around those stars…For instance those other places mentioned have different gravity levels, different power structure of the stars, different atmospheric pressure etc….Every fiber of our being is in direct relation to the variables/settings of Earth. It likely wouldn’t translate somewhere else. Our bones, blood, skin, muscles etc would all be affected in a negative way. Earth is our home.

    • @robynliteracy7057
      @robynliteracy7057 9 месяцев назад +115

      This is why I find the idea of humans living on Mars to not only be ridiculous, but possibly a disastrous waste of time and resources. The physiological changes that occur in humans who are off-planet for long periods of time may be insurmountable, in any case.

    • @shaanchaudhry5719
      @shaanchaudhry5719 9 месяцев назад +65

      @@robynliteracy7057 I agree Robyn that’s a great point. When I initially heard about the idea of terraforming Mars the concept seemed interesting and I told myself it makes the most sense that humans need to colonize other planets to increase the chance for the continuation of our species in the long term.
      But then I started realizing how unbelievably barren/cold/desolate a place like Mars is. Living on Mars would be a nightmare not to mention how ugly the planet is compared to Earth and how the quality of our lives would be exponentially worse even if we survived the toxic atmosphere. There’s a very depressing quality when thinking of leaving Earth and moving backwards from the living standards we are accustomed to. Thanks but no thanks!

    • @johnrichmond8606
      @johnrichmond8606 9 месяцев назад +23

      So you don't think we're able to adapt look at how we've changed ourselves and Earth

    • @janmojzis
      @janmojzis 9 месяцев назад

      @@shaanchaudhry5719 We need a planet with active inner core to shield from toxic radiation that our sun gives. And thats another factor where Mars fails completely. There is no active inner core planet in our solar system beside earth. All others are barren, lifeless, unshielded. An electromagnetic shield is the first thing I would require in order to survive on a planet orbiting its sun. Radiation from the sun is so powerful it penetrates the earth's atmosphere creating O3 from O2. Imagine to be exposed to the sun's radiation unshielded. It is an instant death. Burns from radiation and immerse energy levels. Even that far from the sun as we are (or Mars is).

    • @shaanchaudhry5719
      @shaanchaudhry5719 9 месяцев назад +44

      @@johnrichmond8606 We earned our place here. Every fiber of our being originated with the ingredients found here. Evolving on our host planet is completely different than going to a remote planet.

  • @satguy
    @satguy 5 месяцев назад +12

    Although red dwarfs are smaller and cooler than the sun, they tend to spin faster and be more active. This means they give off a lot of radiation that would be harmful for life on any planets that might orbit them.

    • @alperenerdogan1381
      @alperenerdogan1381 13 дней назад +1

      I thought the same. These planets need a much thicker atmosphere than on Earth to protect them from the crazy radioactivity created by their red dwarf suns. But a thick atmosphere would cause the planet to be very cold because not enough sunlight could reach the surface. For reasons like this, it is almost impossible to find habitable planets around red dwarfs.

  • @Peekaboo-Kitty
    @Peekaboo-Kitty 3 месяца назад +6

    The Goldilocks Zone all depends on the type of Sun you have. The Goldilocks Zone is different around each Star. Bigger, hotter Stars like the Sun, a G-type Star, have a wider habitable zone, while smaller Red Dwarfs confine habitable planets to a narrower range.

  • @hoodedr6
    @hoodedr6 11 месяцев назад +1237

    Learning about all this makes me realise just how perfect the conditions of our solar system, sun, even our own planet is. We’ve found thousands of planets out there and none are even close to as perfect for life as earth. The odds of our planet being so perfect for life must be insane.

    • @joshsherman2623
      @joshsherman2623 11 месяцев назад +99

      And that alone might be why we're possibly the only advanced lifeforms

    • @riyaansheikh7470
      @riyaansheikh7470 11 месяцев назад +256

      Proof of God?

    • @timduggan1461
      @timduggan1461 11 месяцев назад +201

      ​@@riyaansheikh7470 Nope.

    • @sutediheriyonoBaladMaUng
      @sutediheriyonoBaladMaUng 11 месяцев назад +30

      Life with full of joy is heaven.
      We are live in heaven, but ppl still thinking it's not.

    • @sutediheriyonoBaladMaUng
      @sutediheriyonoBaladMaUng 11 месяцев назад +30

      @@timduggan1461 why you lived?
      Ppl never believe in GOD when their life full happiness and joy.
      Ppl believe in GOD just when their life in danger.
      Who will you looking for if your life in danger?

  • @bherber
    @bherber 7 месяцев назад +373

    The thing that really gets me about this is that we're only identifying planets as habitable zone based on where life we're used to could exist. There could be life that we could never even perceive, and that life could also never perceive us.

    • @RogueShadows
      @RogueShadows 7 месяцев назад +52

      True, but I’d hardly call it anthrocentrism. We’re looking for carbon-based life because carbon is extremely common in the universe and easily forms bonds with other atoms, which allow for complex molecules. Due to just basic chemistry carbon-based life would need water and oxygen so we’re looking for that.
      The next best element to look for is silicon…but it’s only 1/10th as abundant as carbon and forms only a fraction as many compounds (and half of them are _with carbon)._ And all the other elements are even more unlikely.
      The universe has some fundamental rules to it. I mean yeah sure maybe there’s life out there based on non-Baryonic matter or something, bunch of Photino birds making nuisances of themselves or whatever. But we have no possible way to detect them and no idea how they’d function so there’s no real point in looking. For now, given its abundance, it makes the most sense to stick to looking for carbon-based life.

    • @peternielsen8601
      @peternielsen8601 7 месяцев назад +6

      Correct, but that's is all we can do. We cant see what we cant see.

    • @bherber
      @bherber 7 месяцев назад +4

      @@RogueShadows - Yea but we hardly understand all the rules of the universe... Look at how little we understand about dark matter and dark energy for one... But I'm not opposed to us searching. If we find something, that's good.

    • @bherber
      @bherber 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@peternielsen8601 - I know that. Did I say I opposed what we're doing? No...

    • @BellahBoo
      @BellahBoo 7 месяцев назад +2

      Yeah I always wonder if there are living things on planets that are super hot or super cold. There must be. Even though it's not suitable for us, it might be suitable for other things. That's so scary to think about.

  • @robertbell3434
    @robertbell3434 3 месяца назад +6

    Even if we as humans have discovered potentially habitatable planets outside of our solar system and even galaxy, there's no way EVER in our lifetime we'll ever get there.!!

  • @chrislyman6946
    @chrislyman6946 7 месяцев назад +2

    it's absolutely absurd to believe that we have the technology to observe habitable planets at distances we can't intellectually perceive.

    • @rakhatthenut3815
      @rakhatthenut3815 6 часов назад

      We can't actually "observe" them. We can just learn their existence and get an idea what planets are they. Google spectroscopy for starters.

  • @Hellker-oj9fw
    @Hellker-oj9fw 11 месяцев назад +760

    Two possibilities exist: either we are alone in the Universe or we are not. Both are equally terrifying
    ~ Arthur C Clarke
    My notifications...

    • @deathsnitemaresinfullust2269
      @deathsnitemaresinfullust2269 11 месяцев назад +9

      🤔 Indeed.
      😄👍

    • @chuksobiora5259
      @chuksobiora5259 11 месяцев назад +17

      I want to think that we are not alone 12:40

    • @bonysminiatures3123
      @bonysminiatures3123 11 месяцев назад +15

      boring comment

    • @deathsnitemaresinfullust2269
      @deathsnitemaresinfullust2269 11 месяцев назад +41

      @@bonysminiatures3123 and your's is any better?🤷‍♂️

    • @dailyrider2975
      @dailyrider2975 11 месяцев назад

      Why terrifying? It's not like physics is going to allow us to meet. So we need to be the best caretakers of our planet as it is the only sustainable one in our solar system. Ooops....to late... Next species step right up and takes your chances !

  • @ridefree9160
    @ridefree9160 10 месяцев назад +152

    This makes me remember to never take a day for granted. What we have here on earth is truly remarkable. We are very lucky

    • @davidlafleche1142
      @davidlafleche1142 10 месяцев назад +5

      They haven't found any habitable planets.

    • @williamkidston4819
      @williamkidston4819 10 месяцев назад

      @@davidlafleche1142 op

    • @user-wd7fo9dp4z
      @user-wd7fo9dp4z 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@davidlafleche1142 to far away

    • @charleswest6372
      @charleswest6372 10 месяцев назад +7

      Yes, and let us take better care of Earth. It's the only Earth we have-!

    • @user-wd7fo9dp4z
      @user-wd7fo9dp4z 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@charleswest6372 ok lets use your money

  • @jonathansantos2271
    @jonathansantos2271 6 месяцев назад

    Keep researching and we might get to suprized ourselves later sooner.
    We could use a sense new Reinheritance comforts and new planet retrogrades.
    Awesome sharing grace❤️🤍💙

  • @TheNinjaPiglet
    @TheNinjaPiglet 6 месяцев назад +4

    My biggest thing about these videos is it just shows how much we focus on specific planets. While I know we are searching for planets that could host life for humans, we are dismissing other planets that could host other life.
    We don't even know if any of the Gas Giants have life on their planet cause we can't go there. There is no surface (or at least no known surface) and the gravity would be too much after a certain point is reached. Yet that doesn't mean no life is there at all. Just like how different life has adapted to places on Earth, the same could be said for other planets.
    This would explain why we haven't found any signs of life outside our own planet. We are only looking for specific conditions that support life. Now you might be asking a particular question. If life is out there, why haven't they made contact with us? The same reason would apply to them. If their planet structure is deems\ed as "inhabitable" to us, they may deem our planet structure to be "inhabitable" for them and thus rule our planet out as a place for life.

    • @CommanderRexz
      @CommanderRexz 3 месяца назад +1

      Fr, imagine those aliens on Jupiter thinking that life can't even be possible on earth, vice versa, Lmao

  • @jasonhedricksen
    @jasonhedricksen 11 месяцев назад +52

    I love how they say they found planets more habitable then earth in the title but what they say in the videos doesn't even sound like it. I'm not saying there is or isnt any life on those planets and maybe there is but im just saying maybe the title should be changed. I mean they say in the video that those planets they mentioned are potentially habitable. But the title says they are more habitable.

    • @furball192
      @furball192 11 месяцев назад +8

      Yes. The title doesn't fit the video at all

    • @jasonhedricksen
      @jasonhedricksen 8 месяцев назад

      @@shafootodess some other way I guess lol

    • @guardiantree8879
      @guardiantree8879 6 дней назад

      Solar systems more habitable than ours might fit, as some had multiple planets in the sweet zone.
      Technically ours has three too though. If only we could give Mars some of Venus’s excess atmosphere.

  • @7ashoBeam
    @7ashoBeam 7 месяцев назад +43

    I watched to the end waiting to hear about the planet that was more habitable than ours but still waiting!

    • @angelinajoanie
      @angelinajoanie 2 месяца назад +1

      😂

    • @Maputi_na_Kalabaw
      @Maputi_na_Kalabaw 2 месяца назад +2

      All of them because they aren't choking to death on plastic.

    • @SaulGoode88
      @SaulGoode88 28 дней назад +2

      It's all bulshit bro keep falling for it

    • @gregoryabbot420
      @gregoryabbot420 26 дней назад +2

      Yeah, they're ALL pretty iffy, huh? Especially since this video was based SOLEY on imagination and conjecture and a LOT of wishful thinking.

  • @coolvinay
    @coolvinay 7 месяцев назад

    Perfect voice for narration. So calm on the ears.

  • @richardsmall3655
    @richardsmall3655 7 месяцев назад +16

    Humans show up and plant a flag. "This is our land !!!"
    Aliens, "What?"

    • @Valkonnen
      @Valkonnen 9 дней назад +1

      Gliese 667 is 22.1 light years (or 207,863,753,281,600 Kilometers) from the Earth . If you were to travel at the velocity of the Helios 2 probe, which traveled at 252,792 KPH , it would take approximately: 93,866.65 years to reach Gliese 667. The fact that they are even talking about this is so mentally backwards.

    • @christopherpoet458
      @christopherpoet458 7 дней назад

      @@Valkonnen No, not really.
      First, if we want to really boil this down to what is possible and what we could do, start taking the current state and growth of technology into account. Robotics being a key point I will highlight here. I have a standing preditction that in 10 years or less we will have the means and ability to set up a ship, give it a robotic crew, launch it to space, send it to Saturn, and set up a station to analyze and identify minable material in the asteroid belt. Lets assume that at this time there are no developments made regarding space flight for a moment.
      The first mission the crew of the ship will have will be to establish a harvestable resource to maintain engine fuel. Theoretically possible but not enterally proven. Assume for a moment it does work, we could theoretically have (in the next say 50 years) an operational automated program to establish and operate a station in space with the sol purpose to locate, mine, and transport resources back to earth without carrying a human crew.
      Knowing that, It is safe to assume any exploration efforts made will probably remain in our solar system. However, we do have the possibility after reaching that point of setting up a ship built for long distance travel using automated systems to safely carry unfertile but preserved eggs and sperm to basically send a "seed ship" to a planet of our choosing to populate it with new life. Now, obviously this has its own challenges and we are assuming that even preserved the necessary requirements to carry life to that planet will stay preserved is questionable, but for the fun of the hypothetical, assume it does.
      The ship would be able to operate on low power using little fuel for most of the flight until it had to make alterations to trajectory. Once it got say 30 years in range of the planet, the ship could be equipped to dethawed, fertilize the eggs, nurture the offspring, and raise the kids to adult hood before they got to even reach the planet. By the time the crew got there they would be in their 30s, Granted, that hypothetical has a lot of ethical dilemmas let alone logistic and it is arguable by then we may develop long term stasis technology to just send full grown trained volunteers instead. Still, this sort of transportation in some way is going to be mandatory for colonization. Unless we hit some serious breakthroughs in space flight.
      What we can do until then is at least locate places we can keep an eye on as possible settling locations if we ever get the chance to try it. Most of these observations are just that, observations. And doing research now on possible habitual worlds to explore is not useless. And there is no telling what else we could learn just from star gazing into the universe.

  • @xTBCGx
    @xTBCGx 7 месяцев назад +76

    Some of these "super habitable" planets make me wonder if life started so abruptly and was able to spread so quickly that it hinders the complexity. Like if the environment doesn't challenge organisms enough, they might have found some happy stasis as an algae that has no reason to evolve

    • @miamithijs3579
      @miamithijs3579 6 месяцев назад +2

      What im wondering about is how much the earths wobble/seasons affected evolution. And how much or moon does. Those 2 combined maybe put evolution in a certain speed because species had to be adaptable.

    • @fitfogey
      @fitfogey 5 месяцев назад +5

      Right. I’ve thought the same thing. It’s like they are almost “too comfortable” where here things had to keep fighting and changing and evolving to live.

    • @aForkfulOfGold
      @aForkfulOfGold 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@fitfogey
      Interesting thought, but I don't think that's very likely tbh. We should not assume that life on other planets would be easier or more stable and sustainable than it was and is on Earth.
      Other Earth-like planets too would likely experience periods of heavy tectonc activity leading to eruptions and possibly extinction events. They too could be hit by intense bursts of radiation or asteroids. A rogue planet or giant asteroid could pass by close enough to tilt their axis, induce or affect rotation around their own axis, or even change their orbit around their star (fingers crossed that this doesn't occur on Earth for the foreseeable future, lmao).
      Those things could happen anywhere on any habitable, Earth-like exoplanet. Earth probably is not unique in that regard.

    • @jugo1944
      @jugo1944 4 месяца назад

      A planet of algae is an incredible niche for an awaiting predator to evolve to graze on them

    • @fixthat3269
      @fixthat3269 3 месяца назад

      It really does being up questions like, what happens if people are in a habitable area but don't have access to the things we're accustomed to - if they regress back into tribal like, that could raise the question of if that could have happened before even. Obviously that's questions alone, not much consideration included, simple speculation.

  • @chrisandrews3979
    @chrisandrews3979 9 месяцев назад +45

    Being in the habitable zone is one thing but you also have to take into account bacteria and the whole ecosystem of the planet. I doubt we will ever see a planet more "habitable" than Earth because of this.

    • @markbranstrator9602
      @markbranstrator9602 7 месяцев назад

      us going to another planet in a habitable zone will do to humanity what whites did to native populations w smallpox.

    • @squanto2
      @squanto2 6 месяцев назад +5

      We will never even get close to inhabiting those other worlds. Never. Not ever.

    • @CamouflageMaster
      @CamouflageMaster 5 месяцев назад +1

      Yeah plus gravity and day/night cycle

  • @eternalnoob9708
    @eternalnoob9708 6 месяцев назад +4

    Here is a future topic to consider maybe. I was wondering about the possibilities of how Earth achieved it's vegetation from seeds of real things rather than imagination. I can only come up with two possibilities myself. 1) The Sun, is actually the burning core of a larger planet that exploded, or was impacted to the point of destruction. If this original planet already had vegetation, then Earth is a remnant piece, and our positioning to sustain life makes our results quantifiable there. 2) Other pieces of space debri, from outer areas with seeds in the composition. Impacting Earth early on. Otherwise, we have to determine how seeds were made out of nothing but some hot air potentially.

  • @KapilSharma-od1sw
    @KapilSharma-od1sw 2 месяца назад

    These videos always leave me surprised and make me think instead of Searching for other habitable planets we must protect and take care of your mother earth especially all these vids just lead to one conclusion that our earth is just prefect❤

  • @jlinus7251
    @jlinus7251 9 месяцев назад +251

    I refuse to believe we were the only other intelligent life in this universe. Even if it was billions of years ago on another planet in another galaxy, I like to imagine some other intelligent life existed.

    • @foxhollowantiques7098
      @foxhollowantiques7098 9 месяцев назад +14

      Ha! You think man is intelligent?

    • @ericc2083
      @ericc2083 9 месяцев назад +5

      Other intelligent life?? Which other one are you referring to?

    • @LolitaAdoreHaze
      @LolitaAdoreHaze 9 месяцев назад +8

      @@foxhollowantiques7098 By definition the answer to that would be certainly.

    • @monobiteme6014
      @monobiteme6014 9 месяцев назад +6

      @@ericc2083 aliens.. I guess

    • @ericc2083
      @ericc2083 9 месяцев назад

      @@monobiteme6014 Ok...if you say so. I thought she meant in addition to aliens.

  • @fry2901
    @fry2901 11 месяцев назад +182

    This channel helped inspire me to take astronomy classes and keep working towards a possible career in astrobiology. ❤ always look forward to new videos.

    • @aaasdghj1
      @aaasdghj1 11 месяцев назад +7

      We continually need people like you 👌🏼🙏🏼

    • @fry2901
      @fry2901 11 месяцев назад +8

      @@aaasdghj1 I’m not special at all. May never end up working in the field, but we need curious people eager to learn new things and be wrong!

    • @aaasdghj1
      @aaasdghj1 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@fry2901 that's exactly what I mean

    • @davidsheckler4450
      @davidsheckler4450 11 месяцев назад +5

      That's a nice way to scam tax payer money. A career in the cartoon of space

    • @davidsheckler4450
      @davidsheckler4450 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@aaasdghj1They steal your tax money why do you need that 🤷🤦

  • @leecowell8165
    @leecowell8165 7 месяцев назад

    ELT is coming on board in a few years in Atacama and it has a HUGE mirror that dwarfs JWST. Its also gonna sport atmospheric correction and because of its 39M mirror its resolution will be a LOT higher than JWST thereby making atmospheres that it can see a lot more visible than JWST.

  • @Spinz99
    @Spinz99 6 месяцев назад +1

    So exciting. We're not alone! We should go check it out ourselves someday in the future.

  • @YuriVelcroripper
    @YuriVelcroripper 9 месяцев назад +8

    I love that you added the elite dangerous clip at the beginning. Although the renderings of the planets may not be accurate, i can go there in that game. It uses an up-to-date model of our entire galaxy and

  • @maculuscarpeneli4585
    @maculuscarpeneli4585 10 месяцев назад +20

    You have provided well researched and edifying scientific knowledge and explained it with terse proficiency. A fine lecture and interesting exploration of our best nieghbors in the Scorpius galaxy just 26 light years away . Give us more like this . Thank You.

    • @nikkistahr7105
      @nikkistahr7105 10 месяцев назад

      Sir or Mam, your diction is impeccable!!👏🏼 very refreshing to read your message 😊

    • @jayme3181
      @jayme3181 10 месяцев назад

      Yeah it was really, really good. Really good. Great, in fact. Really, really, really great.

    • @foxhollowantiques7098
      @foxhollowantiques7098 7 месяцев назад

      Yeah AI comes up with all kinds of nonsense, happy you all enjoyed it🙄

  • @colton72395
    @colton72395 4 месяца назад +1

    From what I understand it’s very unlikely that planets around a dwarf star could have live to to the radiation they get from having to be so close to the star but there is a chance for some planets having a magnetic field like earth does helps a lot

  • @anthonybyers3372
    @anthonybyers3372 7 месяцев назад +2

    We need to invent something like a Warp Drive or Hyper Drive to get to those planets.

  • @sumeru0728
    @sumeru0728 9 месяцев назад +7

    If we can't live on earth peacefully, then we don't deserve other planets

  • @George-lq4li
    @George-lq4li 7 месяцев назад +29

    I am finding these astronomy videos on RUclips so fascinating! I had no idea that much was discovered. Thank you.

    • @George-lq4li
      @George-lq4li 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@Mario_Sky_521 it is still related to/based on Astronomy. I assume it's an established science taught at universities, not just based on imagination...

    • @K-Sader
      @K-Sader 2 месяца назад

      You're welcome.

  • @clarkm8840
    @clarkm8840 7 месяцев назад

    One light year is approximately 6 trillion miles. With current technology and understanding of physics and time, it would take tens of thousands of years to go just that distance, let alone 23 light years. The question of time and dimension would need to be solved, with the technology to do it, before space travel could become a possibility.

  • @michiochaaa
    @michiochaaa 11 месяцев назад +273

    Imagine if one day our great-grandchildren have to travel light years away because they want to spend holidays on Earth.

    • @jukijunk
      @jukijunk 11 месяцев назад +18

      Time travel and teleportation would probably exist

    • @michiochaaa
      @michiochaaa 11 месяцев назад +12

      @@jukijunk it's possible but probably going to take another century, seeing we're still far away from having transportation that could travel near the speed of light, let alone time travel or teleportation. Let's just hope for the best🙏

    • @lm_Genie
      @lm_Genie 11 месяцев назад +4

      ​​@@michiochaaa traveling near the speed of light or equal to would be time traveling. Which is so exciting to think about

    • @NPCSpotter
      @NPCSpotter 11 месяцев назад +23

      That will never happen. Stop being delusional

    • @nikobellic4854
      @nikobellic4854 11 месяцев назад +1

      be because AI has taken over

  • @CheddahSlammer
    @CheddahSlammer 10 месяцев назад +183

    I always find this stuff fascinating, because to me the concept of the habitable Zone assumes that life can only occur were their is water. What about life that isn't made or doesn't need water to exist. Just because we never found evidence to support that doesn't make it not possible. Look at the concept for Silicon based life forms, they would be breathing Sand and would be able to endure much hotter temperatures.

    • @trashbrosinc2461
      @trashbrosinc2461 10 месяцев назад +24

      There is a neat video explaining why silicon-based life is pretty much not possible

    • @zeuslgn
      @zeuslgn 9 месяцев назад +18

      Because when guesstimating what planets are worth investigating regarding habitability we're trying to *narrow* the list down. Simple, known variables are better for that.

    • @scottgalbraith7461
      @scottgalbraith7461 9 месяцев назад +33

      The experts are very careful to say "life as we know it", because theyre not trying to get tripped up in the definition of life. Some places we will never look for life simply because we know WE can't live there.

    • @tonig2757
      @tonig2757 9 месяцев назад +8

      How about the concept of a planet being inhabited by creatures that are not life forms, such as robots for example.

    • @zeuslgn
      @zeuslgn 9 месяцев назад +3

      @@tonig2757 Up to 400 Billion possible stars in just this galaxy. A NASA-sized budget. A handful of capable devices you have to share with thousands of other researchers and need to book time on in advance. Months or years of analyzing the data.
      Let us know when you find the robot planet. 😉

  • @stevelawrie9115
    @stevelawrie9115 6 месяцев назад

    Absolutely marvelous, I'll have to have a look on my next holidays. :) Maybe even look at a couple of real estate agencies. Ironically it might be better to just look after the one I'm on better. (All jokes aside, interesting information)

  • @roberthunter6927
    @roberthunter6927 26 дней назад

    I think any system of sufficient complexity could promote life. Temperature gradients, a polar solvent for redox reactions [not necessarily water] , an active plate tectonics system for turnover of minerals, and time. There are only about 20 elements necessary for life as we know it, with the rarer ones providing nuances to "CHON' structures. But the periodic table is iterative. Chemical properties are similar [but not the same of course] as mass increases. Monovalent, divalent and triple valence metals for example. Different temperatures and pressures many allow "analog" systems to evolve. Perhaps silicon instead of carbon, and so on. Acids and bases abound. So anions and cations. Also, there needs to be metabolism and some form of storing information, like nucleic acids, or some equivalent system.
    We find it hard to recognize first life on our own planet, if you go far enough back in the fossil record. Finding small, cell-like structures that could be strictly of non-living character, or the simplest life or proto-life systems.
    We can't even agree if viruses are alive or not, because without hosts, they are inert, but inside a host, they gain the ability for life-type functions. For obvious reasons, viruses are not first life, but the very first life must have shared some features with viruses.
    That life came from non-life is speculative, but we have an embarrassment of riches now. Multiple ways that life could have started-from ribozymes, to bi-layer lipid membranes with some metabolic chemistry inside, clay or other substrates, and so on.

  • @modernviewscience6745
    @modernviewscience6745 10 месяцев назад +8

    Wonderful. On my wish list would be rocky watery worlds in the Goldie lock zone. I'm asking for much but water is quite important (and very pleasant!). I read somewhere that the light shining from a star, through the atmosphere of an exoplanet can sometimes be perceived all the way to our instruments! (spectrum analysis of H2O, I think).That's quite a feat. Meaning that in some cases, they were able to ascertain the presence of water vapor in their atmosphere. Could you tell us examples of this, still evaluated with other favorable parameters like Goldie lock zone, is it also rocky (not just gas) and of the right size? Thank you so much. "The mind is not a vessel to be filled but a fire to be kindled." - Plutarch

  • @lastsonofabraham2678
    @lastsonofabraham2678 11 месяцев назад +16

    Answers a lot of questions I have been asking, great work 👍👍

  • @vobavocal
    @vobavocal 6 месяцев назад

    I would love to hear the latest news about the Trappist System. Haven't heard anything new in quite a while...

  • @AttilatheThrilla
    @AttilatheThrilla 3 месяца назад +5

    I’d rather go to one of these planets rather than Mars..

  • @zeebrook
    @zeebrook 9 месяцев назад +69

    It's marvellous what scientists have found out about distant stars and their XO planets. It makes me think how perfect the earth is placed for life in all its diversity as we know it to survive. Plus, we have a planet out there that acts as a dustbin to trap asteroids and meteorites that could potentially hit Earth. And although there may be a planet that supports life somewhere out there, at this moment, we haven't found one. So, to me, it's important that we look after what we have here on the planet we call Earth and home.

    • @frankp7411
      @frankp7411 9 месяцев назад +4

      A planet thats devoid of life aka food isn't habitable.

    • @EarthSurferUSA
      @EarthSurferUSA 9 месяцев назад

      I am sick of that anti free market commie junk 45 years of handing over our free enterprise to communism in china, and your ohhh so important EPA regulations could not be added in the anti trade agreements? It is not about saving the planet, it is about growing communism. Maybe we are stuck here because communism dumb's down our education. If Aliens made it here, want to bet they live under philosophies such as individual liberty, which is why they have not been hostile.
      Tape recorder for a brain. Knock it off!

    • @MemoGrafix
      @MemoGrafix 9 месяцев назад

      All this Diversity of Life on Earth - People, Animals, Plants/Botanicals Insects, Microbes, Germs, Bacteria, Viruses means Earth is a ZOO.

    • @markbranstrator9602
      @markbranstrator9602 7 месяцев назад

      IN AN INFINITE SPACE, we are not all.@@frankp7411

    • @proximacentauri3358
      @proximacentauri3358 7 месяцев назад

      Our existence is just a blink in Earth's lifetime. Some planets had life but lost it, some will have in the future. Millions of years able to change everything.

  • @joeblow26
    @joeblow26 9 месяцев назад +4

    This must be the most exciting fun job there is being a scientist of space because you can basically predict whatever you want and who's going to prove you wrong?

  • @elpananacho33
    @elpananacho33 7 месяцев назад +4

    Realistically, even if we found a million potentially habitable planets, we would still not know for sure whether or not life exists beyond Earth. This is because we do not yet have the technology to travel faster than the speed of light, and even if we did, we would still need to develop the technology to detect life on those planets. This raises the question: are we alone in the universe, or are we simply too limited in our technology to find out?
    I argue that we should be putting more efforts into developing faster-than-light travel technology instead of billion-dollar telescopes. If we want to truly answer the question of whether or not we are alone in the universe, we need to be able to travel to other stars and planets.
    Sadly, the world never puts money on physics unless it's for weapons, so this is probably not happening anytime soon.

    • @marcelleclair4452
      @marcelleclair4452 29 дней назад

      Star Trek resolved all those issues 🤣. Heck even a million light years away they speak American English. That’s amazing!

  • @lopakumari5404
    @lopakumari5404 Месяц назад +1

    Thank you for give knowledge about solar system

  • @Onceuponatime-video
    @Onceuponatime-video 11 месяцев назад +9

    Best space channel ever. Keep it up 😄

  • @TrapaniSicilia
    @TrapaniSicilia 10 месяцев назад +6

    Humans need to look after what they have not go looking for other planets to ruin and destroy.

  • @theofontaine5564
    @theofontaine5564 6 месяцев назад +5

    What if we are the Aliens?

    • @KEVINSURIEL
      @KEVINSURIEL 23 дня назад +1

      I always felt different

    • @detesti
      @detesti 22 дня назад

      if that: remember, be a better Alien yourself first 💐"

    • @Dwoed
      @Dwoed 10 дней назад

      Plenty of Aliens on earth seeking for a save place to live.

    • @DJRossNoir
      @DJRossNoir 9 дней назад

      From a certain point of view.

    • @LEGENDGAMEZ-ib8sm
      @LEGENDGAMEZ-ib8sm 9 дней назад

      🤯🤯🤯🤯🤯

  • @doomraider551
    @doomraider551 9 месяцев назад +28

    How exciting to imagine being advanced enough to go and discover and explore everyone of these planets and more.

    • @novalamason2964
      @novalamason2964 9 месяцев назад +7

      How sad, that we're so advanced, yet we keep destroying the one planet that's sustaining us.

    • @doomraider551
      @doomraider551 9 месяцев назад

      @@novalamason2964 That's not so advanced.

    • @NovaLaMason
      @NovaLaMason 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@doomraider551 That’s… That’s the point.

    • @colesmith7230
      @colesmith7230 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@novalamason2964 Such a copy-paste response. Come up with your own thoughts

    • @varunaggarwal7126
      @varunaggarwal7126 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@novalamason2964 its a tutorial mode 👍👍

  • @MbahMu9829
    @MbahMu9829 10 месяцев назад +24

    One thing that most scifi movie failed to show is that The biggest threat of a habitable alien planet is its microorganisms. Who knows what kind of disease that it can cause to our human physiology.

    • @liwojenkins
      @liwojenkins 9 месяцев назад +4

      The idea that pathogens that evolved for completely different conditions would find us appetizing is an odd belief. Most pathogens can't comfortably infect all life on this planet, and they evolved to do so, it's more likely our immune systems would crush anything we encounter.

    • @maladjustedtv
      @maladjustedtv 9 месяцев назад +1

      Thats exactly how the aliens in war of the worlds were overcome

    • @phillipcummings3518
      @phillipcummings3518 9 месяцев назад

      @@liwojenkins Using adjectives like appetizing and comfortably for single celled organisms signals to everyone that you're an idiot.

  • @user-mi7wk4qh2n
    @user-mi7wk4qh2n 6 месяцев назад

    It's Still beautiful ✨🌱
    I love any human that uses fantasy and science to enjoy this Universe more!

  • @NaveedRizwani-dh9jj
    @NaveedRizwani-dh9jj 6 месяцев назад

    This is extremely exciting to know and I am convinced that we are not alone

  • @misteRRobot713
    @misteRRobot713 11 месяцев назад +4

    I just got back from Gliese 713! Twas an amazing journey, highly recommended!

  • @makanminum670
    @makanminum670 10 месяцев назад +25

    If there is trillions of galaxies out there where each galaxy has trillions of stars in it and each star has its own solar system with its orbiting planets, isn't it possible to have the exact planet formation similar to the earth formation out there? or to put it in another word, is it possible that there is only one earth-like planet formation in this massive and vast universe?

    • @vkdeen7570
      @vkdeen7570 10 месяцев назад +12

      both things are possible it just depends on the odds...
      say there's 10^30 habitable planets out there... huge number
      but then say the odds of life spontaneously happening given the right elements and the conditions of the planet being exact right and that life not getting killed early by radiation or planetary impacts etc etc is 1/10^40 ... then quite frankly it's a miracle life even sprouted once
      so there's just too many variables

    • @marcbordeau1702
      @marcbordeau1702 9 месяцев назад +2

      No planet, no solar system was ever created from a bang of nothing.

    • @seedhiBaatNoBakwas.
      @seedhiBaatNoBakwas. 9 месяцев назад +1

      Agreed

    • @decembersbitch7694
      @decembersbitch7694 9 месяцев назад

      we are living on tha planet known as earth, i believe planets are real.@@marcbordeau1702

    • @Andy-we5og
      @Andy-we5og 8 месяцев назад +4

      ​@@marcbordeau1702 maths science history unravelled in a mystery that all started with a big bang

  • @chrismidwood7869
    @chrismidwood7869 6 месяцев назад

    It is all very interesting. Theres a European ELT being built apparently ready for use by 2028. And NASA are proposing an x-ray observatiry called habitable worlds, running in 2041. There are others as well. Based on the amazing advancements so far it'll be really interesting to see what they find.

  • @JulieBirTV
    @JulieBirTV 24 дня назад +1

    Imagine owing private rockets or renting them to go away for holidays or to shift, other than the earth. A new holiday destination.

  • @Magneticlaw
    @Magneticlaw 11 месяцев назад +74

    "More habitable than Earth" - Earth's pretty habitable, seeing as it's the only planet known to contain life.

    • @LevineLawrence
      @LevineLawrence 11 месяцев назад +3

      Like saying the grass is greener on the other side!

    • @MDE_never_dies
      @MDE_never_dies 11 месяцев назад +1

      "Planets can always be wetter, look greener"

    • @jmwlife2k
      @jmwlife2k 11 месяцев назад +1

      Not to mention a visit to even the closest possible planet with life would take thousands of years of fuel production; and even the nicest of estimates put it at a 50,000 year travel time. So there’s no way anyone alive today can prove it unless something comes from out there claiming to be from out there

    • @julieblair168
      @julieblair168 10 месяцев назад

      If a planet is more habitable than earth would definitely have life. What would we do? I know just hope we could be dominant over the life and take over the planet, kill all the life that was there and then ruin that planet too. Humans, a stain on the universe.

    • @AusOpenBodybuilding
      @AusOpenBodybuilding 10 месяцев назад +2

      "Known"

  • @GururajBN
    @GururajBN 6 месяцев назад +3

    The habitability of the Gleise planets is still in the fantasy zone. Too hot for us, or too cold for us, or too much exposure to the flares of the star.
    Mankind’s optimism is astounding.

  • @grantjones8690
    @grantjones8690 5 месяцев назад +1

    We have detected ,so far, about 3300 probable planets. hot Jupiters or tidally locked planets close to red dwarfs that are relatively easy to detect. Finding an Earth size planet one AU away from a G type star like the sun would be difficult, especially with a few gas giants in the same system. There may likely be lots of Earth 2.0s out there. we just can't easily find them right now.

  • @riaddaniels2823
    @riaddaniels2823 7 месяцев назад +5

    Imagine humans going to each of those planets, and making them uninhabitable.

  • @albertdalton9644
    @albertdalton9644 10 месяцев назад +15

    Fun Fact: With current technology it would take 37,000 years to travel 1 light year.

    • @TheRadChadDad
      @TheRadChadDad 9 месяцев назад

      We’d better get going then 😏

    • @monkeycsl
      @monkeycsl 9 месяцев назад

      Just told space and time in half then pass through the point and unfold instant space travel.

    • @microscopic.caterpill
      @microscopic.caterpill 8 месяцев назад

      @@monkeycslYessss! Wormhole

    • @MelonEsuk
      @MelonEsuk 7 месяцев назад

      @@microscopic.caterpill Only a mathematical concept even so called space time doesnt exist in real world

    • @fears2818
      @fears2818 7 месяцев назад

      @@MelonEsuk Its a theory that we cant even fully grasp because space time is 4 dimensional. This theory has been supported by a number of experiments tho, like measuring the deflection of light by the sun, and the observation of gravitational waves. Also, there is a lot of evidence from cosmology that supports the idea of a space time fabric, including the observed large-scale structure of the universe and the cosmic microwave background radiation

  • @user-di3ok5sn1w
    @user-di3ok5sn1w 6 месяцев назад

    Hi I was just wondering is this a free of charge site if yr wanting to subscribe, as I have already I just don't want to find out down the line that there's hidden charges is all?!! I hope I've made sense here with this question!! And very interesting stuff to learn about I've always had an interest in the unknown about space & all wat it has to offer!!

  • @AmerigoGadsden
    @AmerigoGadsden 7 месяцев назад

    Astrophysicist Hugh Ross has stated that we have discovered almost 7,000 planets, none of which are close to being able to sustain life. One exception: Earth

  • @nawwk79
    @nawwk79 11 месяцев назад +19

    Goldilocks zone doesn’t mean it’s habitable, Venus and Mars are in the habitable zone too.
    Even if habitable also doesn’t mean it can harbour life.

    • @rji5377
      @rji5377 11 месяцев назад +5

      You mean our life...life can be very strange and surv very different conditions

    • @Vurinati
      @Vurinati 11 месяцев назад +6

      ​@@rji5377Exactly, Fish that live deep in the oceans where the pressure is enough to crush your skull, No light can reach and every creature is blind, Some animals have evolved to respond to those conditions.

    • @rji5377
      @rji5377 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@Vurinati shit many live in methane or in surfer volcanic areas. Tartagrades can survive space . Who knows what's out there

    • @nealvandersteltexpreales-qz5og
      @nealvandersteltexpreales-qz5og 11 месяцев назад +1

      There's lots of variables that cannot be answered from this distance because of observation from this distance is impossible.. There are also mass (of this planet), our moon's positions as a stabilizer, and other arrangements.. Since there are trillions upon trillions of stars, there's going to be different variations of this Earth and other planets.. but since patterns repeat there's probably a lot of similar planets.. Just imagine if every corn on the cob being exactly them same.. There's also different timelines... So there you have it..

  • @melgross
    @melgross 11 месяцев назад +5

    This is misleading. From the title, completely misleading, to some of the information within the video. First of all, all of this is very speculative right now. There is no evidence that any of these planets, or any other we’ve found so far, supports any life, or can.
    There are many things that determine whether a planet can retain an atmosphere. Size, distance from their star, whether it has a liquid core, how stable the star is, and how close neighbor stars are, etc.

  • @football_aholic_
    @football_aholic_ 2 месяца назад +1

    I wanted to know how the first molecule was formed but I dove into it crazy how much could be out there it’s almost infinite

  • @GComas-jn2yc
    @GComas-jn2yc 7 месяцев назад +1

    Someone once said…,”There are intelligent life here in our universe❣️It is right here on Earth 🌎 ❣️🎵🎶”

  • @davidarbuckle7236
    @davidarbuckle7236 9 месяцев назад +5

    The problem with these red dwarfs is the for the planets to be in the habitable zone, they generally have to be very close, which often means tidally locked. And that means one side will be very hot and one side very cold.

    • @cristobalschulkin6948
      @cristobalschulkin6948 6 месяцев назад

      Life would still be possible. You'd have a strip across the planet of a very stable average temperature. It would be a very different weather and climate, of course

    • @davidarbuckle7236
      @davidarbuckle7236 6 месяцев назад

      @@cristobalschulkin6948 I think it is wishful thinking. Or at least for humanoid life. Possibly plant life. But animals? Advanced life forms?

  • @educatedwanderer9293
    @educatedwanderer9293 11 месяцев назад +97

    It is exciting to find out more about distance potential habitable planets, however it will mean so much more if and when we are able to build a spacecraft that will allow us to visit them. We are a long way from that being a practical consideration. For example, if we could travel half the speed of light, it would take over 50 years to reach a system 26 light years away.

    • @jefftan9826
      @jefftan9826 11 месяцев назад +7

      Why not look at another view of even we travel at the speed of light it takes us 26years to reach which is 1/3 of a normal human life time. At current technology it may be nearly an impossible feat, lets see next 50years where can it lead us to, destruction or migration whichever comes first

    • @jarogniewtheconqueror2804
      @jarogniewtheconqueror2804 10 месяцев назад +9

      @@jefftan9826 exactly, who knows if in 50 years we will have the capacity to travel stars if everything collapses due to climate change or nuclear warfare

    • @danielclee4148
      @danielclee4148 10 месяцев назад +15

      The way we travel needs to evolve. Wormholes or teleportation perhaps.

    • @gazw9595
      @gazw9595 10 месяцев назад

      ​​@@jarogniewtheconqueror2804 been more then 50 years... been that since 'landing on the moon' in the 70s kids thought we'd be on mars now. Only thing thats happened are how it was all faked, all original footage was lost, and recreated 😅 all imagery is CGI and the moon rocks were exposed to be wood 😅 what proof??...

    • @jamescuthbert6339
      @jamescuthbert6339 10 месяцев назад

      I posted to wrong one again, stop!

  • @AurioDK
    @AurioDK 7 месяцев назад

    I wonder if Ryanair is planning to expand their fleet to include a 20 light year travel to Gliese.

  • @dmana3172
    @dmana3172 2 месяца назад

    I love to travel there for a vacation. What would be the fastest way to get there?

  • @basicallyayush
    @basicallyayush 11 месяцев назад +31

    this really fires the curiosity out of me

    • @GenuinelyCurious120
      @GenuinelyCurious120 11 месяцев назад +1

      Ew. Bring a towel 😅

    • @Knaeben
      @Knaeben 11 месяцев назад +1

      So you think it's boring? Or just makes you lose your enthusiasm for space?

    • @astroyt5398
      @astroyt5398 11 месяцев назад +5

      Space is always mysterious and interesting

  • @zupergut3015
    @zupergut3015 11 месяцев назад +43

    I don't think we will ever find anything better than earth

    • @kevinrtres
      @kevinrtres 10 месяцев назад +10

      ...there is something better than this earth! The NEW earth in combo with the NEW heavens!!!! Read Isaiah 11 and 65 and Revelation 21 and 22.

    • @pappy9473
      @pappy9473 10 месяцев назад +15

      ​@@kevinrtres As I scrolled down the comments I was pleased to see no fairy tales about supernatural entities - until yours.

    • @bobjones-ln3ji
      @bobjones-ln3ji 10 месяцев назад +1

      Wow bold take you’re pretty smart huh? Kick rocks bud

    • @pappy9473
      @pappy9473 10 месяцев назад

      @@bobjones-ln3ji What? 🤔

    • @jamescuthbert6339
      @jamescuthbert6339 10 месяцев назад

      Ok my laptop is glitching i will stop commenting now.

  • @BlanketGaming-mg8ks
    @BlanketGaming-mg8ks 2 месяца назад +1

    Thank you so much for putting this video! This helps my brain to understand that there’s more then 2 earths, or more then 3, earth, kepler 22b, and finally a new earth I’ve learned! Gliese 667 cb

  • @1haris1
    @1haris1 7 месяцев назад +1

    It is funny that we are not sure about Mars, but are sure about planets that are light-years away.

  • @GeorgeNoX
    @GeorgeNoX 11 месяцев назад +135

    it is very unlikely that any planets around those stars would support life because they would constantly be bombarded by radiation. We should instead be focusing on stars that are very similar or even identical to our own, which are much more rare but the chance of an actual habitable planet is higher

    • @ricksherman34
      @ricksherman34 11 месяцев назад +14

      We would need another G2-V star like Sol since humans , livestock and all of our plants evolved to live under this type of star. We could probably get away with something between G0 and G4.... But it would have to a G type star.

    • @KungFuOne
      @KungFuOne 11 месяцев назад +12

      Atmosphere Man , atmosphere!!! They have 1-5x times thickness that of Earth's atmosphere... So there must be ozone or other layer that protects them just like earth being 3rd planet in habitable zone to avg star

    • @ricksherman34
      @ricksherman34 11 месяцев назад +7

      @@KungFuOne This would only hold true if they had an oxygen rich environment of around 17%. Since you need O2 + UV radiation to make ozone (O3).

    • @leonpaul9443
      @leonpaul9443 11 месяцев назад

      This is all true but we dont have the tech to find planets similar ro earth as sunlike stars emit much more light so the light that reaches us is unaffected by the orbit of a small planet around a dim red dwarf this is not the case. Also the astromers would have to wait years for repeated orbits to be confirmed as planets like ours are much further out than those around red dwarves which complete an orbit in days. I cant see nasa allowing james webb to focus on a sun like star fkr at least 4 years to confirm an earth like planet can you ? Theyd rather use it to take diffrent photos of galaxies and supernovas etc etc every week.

    • @sutediheriyonoBaladMaUng
      @sutediheriyonoBaladMaUng 11 месяцев назад +3

      Human never give up to find a GOD in the sky, but they thought it's just a science.

  • @tzunnynib
    @tzunnynib 11 месяцев назад +7

    Very interesting, more videos like this pls !

  • @enriquecortez2256
    @enriquecortez2256 7 месяцев назад +6

    They found planets but they cannot find peace in our world lol 😂

  • @Arthilious
    @Arthilious 2 месяца назад +2

    "...More Habitable Than Earth" ....?

  • @stk293
    @stk293 4 месяца назад

    If a-Centauri is a triple star system, have you realized the trajectory of a planet around such a system.?.! It's staggeringly complicated and the seasons of this planet with extremes unimaginable to an earthling.!

  • @garymanis6305
    @garymanis6305 9 месяцев назад +4

    I always find it fascinating that scientists claim they know something and speak about it confidently when they are actually making guesses based on approximations based on laws and theories that turn out to be wrong. They can't even predict the weather more than a week in advance with any accuracy, but they think they can predict what conditions are like on a world lightyears away.

    • @dermaniac5205
      @dermaniac5205 9 месяцев назад +1

      In my experience, scientists are typically very honest about uncertainties and assumptions. It's science reporters / science communicators who then state everything as if it were 100% certain in order to make it more easily digestible for a non-scientific audience.

    • @garymanis6305
      @garymanis6305 9 месяцев назад

      @@dermaniac5205 In my experience, the projects that many scientists are working on depend upon grants for a lot of their funding. Those scientists tend to present their findings in a very optimistic and confident way to make sure they get continued funding.

  • @tiyisanimahatlani2182
    @tiyisanimahatlani2182 11 месяцев назад +3

    Much love from South Africa💓really inspirational.

  • @JohnDoe-jk9qn
    @JohnDoe-jk9qn 4 дня назад +1

    As of 1990 I start seriously doubt in "experts" and "scientists"

  • @maggiecavanagh26
    @maggiecavanagh26 12 дней назад

    I don't think some realize that when we hear "five times larger than Earth" the gravity is 5 times more intense, and would be pretty impossible to live on. Even two time larger would be too much gravity for most people.

  • @Justyburger
    @Justyburger 11 месяцев назад +16

    It's definitely very interesting, but at 23 Light years away, it would take over 300 thousand years to get there by conventional rocket. We might as well call that impossible. Even if there was an advanced civilization there, it would take us 23 years to send a message and another 23 years to get a reply. Obviously, we need a warp drive or a third stage guild navigator to fold space.

    • @leonardcollings7389
      @leonardcollings7389 9 месяцев назад +2

      Exactly.

    • @Garlos_es_Listening
      @Garlos_es_Listening 9 месяцев назад +1

      Hahaha awesome Dune reference. I f@ckin love you, bro!!

    • @MelonEsuk
      @MelonEsuk 7 месяцев назад

      Spacetime is a mathematical concept you cant wrap something doesn't exist

  • @Schminner
    @Schminner 9 месяцев назад +10

    That's awesome how we are able to use a thermometer to measure the temperature of those planets light years away.... simply amazing.

  • @tyamada21
    @tyamada21 Месяц назад

    A segment from 'Saved by the Light of the Buddha Within'...
    My new understandings of what many call 'God -The Holy Spirit' - resulting from some of the extraordinary ongoing after-effects relating to my NDE...
    Myoho-Renge-Kyo represents the identity of what some scientists are now referring to as the unified field of consciousnesses. In other words, it’s the essence of all existence and non-existence - the ultimate creative force behind planets, stars, nebulae, people, animals, trees, fish, birds, and all phenomena, manifest or latent. All matter and intelligence are simply waves or ripples manifesting to and from this core source. Consciousness (enlightenment) is itself the actual creator of everything that exists now, ever existed in the past, or will exist in the future - right down to the minutest particles of dust - each being an individual ripple or wave.
    The big difference between chanting Nam-Myoho-Renge-Kyo and most other conventional prayers is that instead of depending on a ‘middleman’ to connect us to our state of inner enlightenment, we’re able to do it ourselves. That’s because chanting Nam-Myoho-Renge-Kyo allows us to tap directly into our enlightened state by way of this self-produced sound vibration. ‘Who or What Is God?’ If we compare the concept of God being a separate entity that is forever watching down on us, to the teachings of Nichiren, it makes more sense to me that the true omnipotence, omniscience and omnipresence of what most people perceive to be God, is the fantastic state of enlightenment that exists within each of us. Some say that God is an entity that’s beyond physical matter - I think that the vast amount of information continuously being conveyed via electromagnetic waves in today’s world gives us proof of how an invisible state of God could indeed exist.
    For example, it’s now widely known that specific data relayed by way of electromagnetic waves has the potential to help bring about extraordinary and powerful effects - including an instant global awareness of something or a mass emotional reaction. It’s also common knowledge that these invisible waves can easily be used to detonate a bomb or to enable NASA to control the movements of a robot as far away as the Moon or Mars - none of which is possible without a receiver to decode the information that’s being transmitted. Without the receiver, the data would remain impotent. In a very similar way, we need to have our own ‘receiver’ switched on so that we can activate a clear and precise understanding of our own life, all other life and what everything else in existence is.
    Chanting Nam-Myoho-Renge-Kyo each day helps us to achieve this because it allows us to reach the core of our enlightenment and keep it switched on. That’s because Myoho-Renge-Kyo represents the identity of what scientists now refer to as the unified field of consciousnesses. To break it down - Myoho represents the Law of manifestation and latency (Nature) and consists of two alternating states. For example, the state of Myo is where everything in life that’s not obvious to us exists - including our stored memories when we’re not thinking about them - our hidden potential and inner emotions whenever they’re dormant - our desires, our fears, our wisdom, happiness, karma - and more importantly, our enlightenment.
    The other state, ho, is where everything in Life exists whenever it becomes evident to us, such as when a thought pops up from within our memory - whenever we experience or express our emotions - or whenever a good or bad cause manifests as an effect from our karma. When anything becomes apparent, it merely means that it’s come out of the state of Myo (dormancy/latency) and into a state of ho (manifestation). It’s the difference between consciousness and unconsciousness, being awake or asleep, or knowing and not knowing.
    The second law - Renge - Ren meaning cause and ge meaning effect, governs and controls the functions of Myoho - these two laws of Myoho and Renge, not only function together simultaneously but also underlies all spiritual and physical existence.
    The final and third part of the tri-combination - Kyo, is the Law that allows Myoho to integrate with Renge - or vice versa. It’s the great, invisible thread of energy that fuses and connects all Life and matter - as well as the past, present and future. It’s also sometimes termed the Universal Law of Communication - perhaps it could even be compared with the string theory that many scientists now suspect exists.
    Just as the cells in our body, our thoughts, feelings and everything else is continually fluctuating within us - all that exists in the world around us and beyond is also in a constant state of flux - constantly controlled by these three fundamental laws. In fact, more things are going back and forth between the two states of Myo and ho in a single moment than it would ever be possible to calculate or describe. And it doesn’t matter how big or small, famous or trivial anything or anyone may appear to be, everything that’s ever existed in the past, exists now or will exist in the future, exists only because of the workings of the Laws ‘Myoho-Renge-Kyo’ - the basis of the four fundamental forces, and if they didn’t function, neither we nor anything else could go on existing. That’s because all forms of existence, including the seasons, day, night, birth, death and so on, are moving forward in an ongoing flow of continuation - rhythmically reverting back and forth between the two fundamental states of Myo and ho in absolute accordance with Renge - and by way of Kyo. Even stars are dying and being reborn under the workings of what the combination ‘Myoho-Renge-Kyo’ represents. Nam, or Namu - which mean the same thing, are vibrational passwords or keys that allow us to reach deep into our life and fuse with or become one with ‘Myoho-Renge-Kyo’.
    On a more personal level, nothing ever happens by chance or coincidence, it’s the causes that we’ve made in our past, or are presently making, that determine how these laws function uniquely in each of our lives - as well as the environment from moment to moment. By facing east, in harmony with the direction that the Earth is spinning, and chanting Nam-Myoho-Renge-Kyo for a minimum of, let’s say, ten minutes daily to start with, any of us can experience actual proof of its positive effects in our lives - even if it only makes us feel good on the inside, there will be a definite positive effect. That’s because we’re able to pierce through the thickest layers of our karma and activate our inherent Buddha Nature (our enlightened state). By so doing, we’re then able to bring forth the wisdom and good fortune that we need to challenge, overcome and change our adverse circumstances - turn them into positive ones - or manifest and gain even greater fulfilment in our daily lives from our accumulated good karma. This also allows us to bring forth the wisdom that can free us from the ignorance and stupidity that’s preventing us from accepting and being proud of the person that we indeed are - regardless of our race, colour, gender or sexuality. We’re also able to see and understand our circumstances and the environment far more clearly, as well as attract and connect with any needed external beneficial forces and situations. As I’ve already mentioned, everything is subject to the law of Cause and Effect - the ‘actual-proof-strength’ resulting from chanting Nam-Myoho-Renge-Kyo always depends on our determination, sincerity and dedication.
    For example, the levels of difference could be compared to making a sound on a piano, creating a melody, producing a great song, and so on. Something else that’s very important to always respect and acknowledge is that the Law (or if you prefer God) is in everyone and everything.
    NB: There are frightening and disturbing sounds, and there are tranquil and relaxing sounds. It’s the emotional result of any noise or sound that can trigger off a mood or even instantly change one. When chanting Nam-Myoho-Renge-Kyo each day, we are producing a sound vibration that’s the password to our true inner-self - this soon becomes apparent when you start reassessing your views on various things - such as your fears and desires etc. The best way to get the desired result when chanting is not to view things conventionally - rather than reaching out to an external source, we need to reach into our own lives and bring our needs and desires to fruition from within - including the good fortune and strength to achieve any help that we may need. Chanting Nam-Myoho-Renge-Kyo also reaches out externally and draws us towards, or draws towards us, what we need to make us happy from our environment. For example, it helps us to be in the right place at the right time - to make better choices and decisions and so forth. We need to think of it as a seed within us that we’re watering and bringing sunshine to for it to grow, blossom and bring forth fruit or flowers. It’s also important to understand that everything we need in life, including the answer to every question and the potential to achieve every dream, already exists within us.

  • @Tlilancalqui
    @Tlilancalqui 5 месяцев назад

    Our earth was like likely more habitable 1,000,000 years ago. But primates and mammals in general needed less habitability in order to become more dominate. That doesn't mean that there isn't a species of intelligent reptile or fish on this planet, but it likely does mean that mammals in general would have a great deal of difficulty surviving a more habitable planet due to the competition of larger and voracious competitors.

  • @Chris-rh9ej
    @Chris-rh9ej 11 месяцев назад +4

    “Earth is about 1 AU from the sun”
    Considering an AU is the distance from the sun to the earth, there’s no “about”. It is 1 AU exactly

    • @charlesheyen6151
      @charlesheyen6151 11 месяцев назад

      an AU is the mean distance and the Earth is sometimes closer and sometimes further away so it may sound weird but his wording is not wrong.

  • @rickgotner7596
    @rickgotner7596 11 месяцев назад +7

    Red Dwarf stars are so small the habitable zone is close-in, so close-in that the planets are tidally locked. Tidally locked planets would be a very difficult place to inhabit, as any atmosphere would be moving at thousands of kilometers per hour. The only planets in these systems that might harbor life are ocean-worlds. Do the two yellow-orange stars have planets? Those would be far better candidates to look at.

    • @nicoleackerman205
      @nicoleackerman205 11 месяцев назад +2

      I do not get the obsession with only looking at red dwarfs for planet.

    • @DS9TREK
      @DS9TREK 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@nicoleackerman205red dwarfs make up almost two-thirds of the stars in our galaxy.

    • @DS9TREK
      @DS9TREK 9 месяцев назад

      Suns like our own mostly have gas giants in close orbit with no rocky planets to be found.

  • @z0ro_62
    @z0ro_62 7 месяцев назад

    Could you image if intelligent life should up on these 4 planets and they all meet each that would be a reaction

  • @robthames5065
    @robthames5065 16 часов назад

    Why is it so hard for people to grasp the fact that Earth is the perfect place for life to exist and that it is the ONLY place where not just life exists, but intelligent life?

  • @global4508
    @global4508 8 месяцев назад +10

    It's actually absurd to think we're alone in Earth itself.

    • @Shitockiful
      @Shitockiful 7 месяцев назад

      Besides when we have been searching for decades for… anything and have only found a couple one called organisms if even. Probably some viruses. It’s rare if there is other life on earth with how we record currently

    • @markbranstrator9602
      @markbranstrator9602 7 месяцев назад

      we JUST started leaving our own solar system and we are looking LIGHT YEARS beyond earth. We are brand ass new at this. Human time is NOTHING compared to cosmic and geological time. The best humans can do is social fn media. We are a trial and nothing more. Humans do not matter outside of your own family unit, you have zero value to the world @@Shitockiful

  • @CG-mb2iu
    @CG-mb2iu 11 месяцев назад +30

    I’m sure in another galaxy there’s another similar to earth. It’s insane how vast and almost like infinite galaxies. In comparison we only represent like a grain of sand in the ocean .

    • @kevinrtres
      @kevinrtres 10 месяцев назад +4

      God really made some wonderful things for us to consider just how unimaginably great HE is!!!

    • @T1DAL-RUSH
      @T1DAL-RUSH 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@kevinrtres You are not a preacher, mind your own business and stop attacking people in the comments. As someone who believes in God, this really makes me feel ashamed of my religion lmao ☠️☠️☠️

    • @kevinrtres
      @kevinrtres 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@T1DAL-RUSH Shampies, if my words are an attack then what exactly does it help that someone only believes in God but is not truly saved?

    • @anas.l0dhi
      @anas.l0dhi 10 месяцев назад +5

      @@T1DAL-RUSH if you can feel ashamed of your religion then are you really a true believer lmao?

    • @rolandquilente9318
      @rolandquilente9318 10 месяцев назад

      @@kevinrtreshundreds of years ago God’s annoying and genocidal fandom claim that Earth is the center of space, now his even more annoying fandom are piggybacking SCIENCE videos commenting his greatness. If he is really great can he pull another earth closer to ours so we can go there because “bad guys” are ruining this one now?

  • @amanah3540
    @amanah3540 20 дней назад

    WHICH EXPEDITION OR PROBE COLLECTED THIS INFORMATION? WHERE CAN I READ THE DATA?

  • @kalebarancelovic
    @kalebarancelovic 9 месяцев назад +4

    If I could choose a super power, it would be to have the ability to visit all these planets and film my journeys for a TV series.

  • @TheDjacob
    @TheDjacob 9 месяцев назад +18

    So if life exist and remember how big dinosaurs were, imagine how big the aliens on these planets could be!!!

    • @redbinaural
      @redbinaural 9 месяцев назад +1

      Not if the gravities are much higher.

    • @TheDjacob
      @TheDjacob 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@redbinaural how would higher gravity change the evolution of life. Yes if it’s so extreme prob something but there’s def adapting and the life would easily sustain if giving right conditions and oxygen levels

  • @classiclife7204
    @classiclife7204 7 месяцев назад +1

    "planets more habitable than Earth" because we're not there.