Universe Size Comparison 3D | Reaction

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  • Опубликовано: 18 мар 2023
  • Watching a Universe Size Comparison & wondering about all of these planets & stars I've never heard of. Thanks for sending this in!
    Original video: • Universe Size Comparis...
    Literary Recommendation:
    The Planets by Andrew Cohen and Brian Cox (Paperback): amzn.to/3jdJEGj
    Cosmos by Carl Sagan (paperback): amzn.to/3VV4mc8
    Try Audible for Audiobooks: amzn.to/3QMwv2G
    IG: @noprotocol_official
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Комментарии • 485

  • @TheMadSentinel
    @TheMadSentinel Год назад +405

    Ceres is in our Asteroid Belt, and is sometimes referred to as a "Planetoid". Callisto is one of Jupiter's moons, the second largest (after Ganymede) in Jupiter's orbit, and the third largest overall in the Solar System. Titan, one of Saturn's moons, is the largest moon in our system. Kepler 22b is an "exoplanet", a planet we've discovered outside of our solar system. And Proxima Centauri is a small star just over 4 light years away from our sun.

    • @joselombana8381
      @joselombana8381 Год назад +26

      Ganymede is 2% larger than Titan.

    • @uzurpon
      @uzurpon Год назад +18

      Alpha Centauri is a trippel star system and its the closest system to us at 4.2 lightyears. Proxima Centauri is the smallest of the 3 stars in that system and it revolves around Alpha Centauri that is the main star there.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proxima_Centauri

    • @KURUZU43
      @KURUZU43 Год назад +20

      dude I was totally going to give her the rundown of everything but you beat me to it nicely done!

    • @Lmi.N
      @Lmi.N Год назад +1

      jyotish books of india is oldest astronomy space book, see lal kitab book, parashara hora, bhrighu samitha book about 5000 + year old .

    • @yaniargirov5399
      @yaniargirov5399 Год назад +6

      ganymede is the largest moon in the solar system

  • @jaakumitsukai8682
    @jaakumitsukai8682 Год назад +101

    I've probably said this before but the Bootes Void is equal parts fascinating and terrifying the more you read into it.
    The most perplexing thing is that it only contains 60 galaxies in a space that would usually roughly have 2000 and we don't know why, the leading theory is that lots of other smaller voids joined together to create this supervoid.
    It's so big that if The Milky Way was in the center of it we wouldn't have known there were other galaxies until the 1960's. Definitely recommend looking up a video on it.

    • @DsgSleazy
      @DsgSleazy Год назад +14

      The fact that people can figure this shit out is still fuckin wild to me, like how.

    • @kamron_thurmond
      @kamron_thurmond Год назад +3

      ​@@DsgSleazy To be fair it's all just mathematical guesstimations.

    • @HkFinn83
      @HkFinn83 Год назад +8

      Space is made up of regions of greater and lesser density. There’s nothing inexplicable about the Bootes (or any other) ‘void’. It’s just used by woo woo science content creators because...woo woo.

    • @mina_en_suiza
      @mina_en_suiza Год назад

      It's the grazing ground for a galaxy eating super-organism made out of Dark Matter.

    • @KURUZU43
      @KURUZU43 Год назад +3

      Agreed the Bootes Void is very very mysterious and very terrifying!!

  • @ernestb4473
    @ernestb4473 Год назад +74

    This woman has the only reaction channel I'll watch. Love to watch her when she learns something new. She gets a half-smile and slightly "giddy" inside.

    • @bigmatthews666
      @bigmatthews666 Год назад

      Shes sooo hot

    • @niccolopaganini1782
      @niccolopaganini1782 Год назад

      I agree

    • @kippariii2550
      @kippariii2550 Год назад +4

      She seems curious and intelligent

    • @adamsyed5535
      @adamsyed5535 10 месяцев назад

      The ones with Indian villagers reacting to videos of the wider world are pretty cool to watch also, for me at least.

  • @gordonpromish9218
    @gordonpromish9218 Год назад +14

    2:43 I love people who can openly admit to not knowing, and then ask. such people can learn. such people are treasures.

  • @BennoWitter
    @BennoWitter Год назад +11

    What makes 2 of those giant stars the most interesting to me, is that I can go outside and actually see them with my own eyes. Rigel (the big blue star) and Betelgeuse (the big orange star) are both part of the Orion constellation and easy to spot. Betelgeuse in on top and Rigel at the bottom. If you have a clear view you can actually see that Rigel has more of a blue tint and Betelgeuse is definitely more orange.

  • @paiute6911
    @paiute6911 Год назад +14

    I would love a second channel where you talk about books! You could also talk about food, movies, music, or really anything you want. That would be badass.

  • @just_gut
    @just_gut Год назад +6

    What I love about watching videos on the universe, especially how massive it is, is how we, as individuals, can mean more to each other than all of *that*. I can be a more powerful force in the lives of my loved ones than nearly the totality of the rest of the universe. It feels pretty awesome.

  • @KURUZU43
    @KURUZU43 Год назад +29

    This video demonstrates size comparisons of various celestial objects that astronomers have observed in the cosmos at large. It's actually not to scale to be honest but it does give you a sense of the enormity of space. Our star (the sun) which is massive is still just a yellow dwarf main sequence star.

    • @TML0677
      @TML0677 Год назад

      There are way better vids, but these reactors just copy/paste the first one reacted looooooool

  • @tomgoulden3339
    @tomgoulden3339 Год назад +13

    2:29 made me smile and laugh a little, in a good way! I’m a Brit and I’ve never heard an American say daft before, quite a common word here but not something we tend to hear on American TV shows and the like, something we watch a lot of. I enjoy this channel for the well rounded, well spoken and very educated perspective you bring to just about anything, nice work! 😊

  • @kobuslab1
    @kobuslab1 Год назад +4

    Perfect end to an already good weekend 👏🏻 Thanks for another super fun video 🤩

    • @Lmi.N
      @Lmi.N Год назад

      jyotish books of india is oldest astronomy space book, see lal kitab book, parashara hora, bhrighu samitha book about 5000 + year old .

  • @charmaine7178
    @charmaine7178 Год назад +2

    The very first time I saw this video was in a college class back in 2016... it literally was a new interest unlocked. I've loved astronomy ever since then its so fascinating

  • @terryhughes7349
    @terryhughes7349 Год назад +11

    Nice reaction. There was a video called "The Scale Of The Universe (The Universe to Quantum Foam)" that went from macro to micro, very fun. A 1950's film actually touched on this "The Incredibly Shrinking Man" very touching ending. Have a great day!

    • @Lmi.N
      @Lmi.N Год назад +1

      yotish books of india is oldest astronomy space book, see lal kitab book, parashara hora, bhrighu samitha book about 5000 + year old .

    • @mina_en_suiza
      @mina_en_suiza Год назад +2

      I loved that film (The shrinking man) when I was a kid, though it scared me a bit.

  • @1fortheroad1
    @1fortheroad1 Год назад +3

    PLEASE DO MORE space videos. I would love to see you uncover so many of the universes hidden gems. I could see you going down the rabbit hole. There's so many interesting things to learn about space.
    Video suggestion: Any of "Lemino"'s space videos. High quality, articulate and well researched

  • @wonderlandian8465
    @wonderlandian8465 Год назад

    All these videos are fascinating on that channel, do more of those. Love your reactions

  • @charlesf2804
    @charlesf2804 Год назад +1

    I identify with your comment about how humbling it was to watch this. This is the sort of thing that gives perspective, reminding us of how small ours can be. "Existential" indeed. After watching this and then thinking about the vastness of the universe (and this is only what we know of), and how much of it there must be beyond what we know of, three things came to me: Star Trek, awe, and worship. I used to be into this kind of stuff when i was a kid, and seeing this arouses some of the curiosity and fascination I had back then. If I can find/make time to read, I would be interested in getting into astronomy again. Or, I think The Great Courses has an astronomy course or two; I might start there.

  • @SchwarzerHaufen
    @SchwarzerHaufen Год назад +12

    Ceres is a dwarf planet that does exist in our solar system but is too small to be considered a planet, Kepler 22b isn't part of our solar system but a earthlike planet about 600 lightyears from our solar system.
    Proxima centauri is the closest star to our own and Sirius A is the brightest star in the night sky. The rest of these objects, that probably goes without saying, are not part of our solar system either.

    • @NoProtocol
      @NoProtocol  Год назад +8

      Thanks for this! Now I need to look up what makes a planet

    • @Lmi.N
      @Lmi.N Год назад

      jyotish books of india is oldest astronomy space book, see lal kitab book, parashara hora, bhrighu samitha book about 5000 + year old .

    • @pete_lind
      @pete_lind Год назад

      @@NoProtocol Planet is a celestial object that has so much mass it crushes itself to near spherical shape ... Pluto is not a planet because its orbit is erratic and one of its moon , Charon , is half of the size of Pluto . Pluto orbit is tilted and oval , closes to sun its only 30AU away and when its at edge of solar system its 49,3 AU from sun , Astronomical Unit = about 93 mil miles /150 mil km .

  • @HottieTobby
    @HottieTobby Год назад +9

    If you enjoyed this, you might enjoy a video called "TIMELAPSE OF THE FUTURE: A Journey to the End of Time (4K)" by melodysheep. That whole channel is fantastic, but I'd definitely recommend that video in particular! It's pretty long, so hopefully you bring enough time with you! I hope I understood your curiosity right

  • @KeldonA
    @KeldonA Год назад +2

    Sometimes I'll gaze up at the night sky observing the endless sea of distant galaxies and feel a little peeved off by the sense I'm staring in the direction of intelligent lives, some of which will be having the exact same thought but we'll never be able to communicate or even confirm the existence if each other.

  • @ronitraj39
    @ronitraj39 Год назад +5

    I would highly recommend Melodysheep videos. They are entertaining, informative and existential. The quality of the videos is second to none.

  • @paiute6911
    @paiute6911 Год назад +1

    I have been a subscriber of your channel for a while now. It has been fun watching your channel grow each time I watch a new video. In no time you will have 100k followers. Looking forward to that day. Please keep up the great work.

  • @theobserver86
    @theobserver86 Год назад +1

    I've seen these videos so I know how astronomical the sizes get is mind blowing even unfathomable it makes the reaction exciting

  • @paiute6911
    @paiute6911 Год назад +7

    I have a literary recommendation(A good place to start):
    Stephen Hawking’s A Brief History Of Time, and The Universe In A Nutshell.
    Recently Barnes and Noble put out an edition with a ton of illustrations so it makes the abstract concept brought up in the book a little easier to digest.

    • @MeFreeBee
      @MeFreeBee Год назад

      There is a new Stephen Hawking book about to be published - On the Origin of Time. Just read a piece in today's Guardian where his collaborator, Thomas Hertog, says Hawking was dissatisfied with A Brief History and wanted a do-over. Sadly it couldn't be finished before he died.

  • @rickbarrett178
    @rickbarrett178 Год назад

    So I watched several of you're reaction vids tonite and I cant decide whether you're more thoughtful or more beautiful. But I know you've got a lot of both!

  • @playit152
    @playit152 Год назад +1

    Just gonna say you have the best react channel on youtube imo. Was gonna tell you about Ceres, Proxima Centauri etc. but it looks like the comments already took care of that. Side note though you could watch (or read) "The Expanse". Great show that fictionally depicts human settlement on Mars, Ceres and other asteroids and the effect it'll have on humans and the politics around it all along with a lot more.
    Also another show you could be interested in is "Raised By Wolves". This one has a lot more religious (fictional) undertone to it but it depicts human settlement in Kepler 22b. Both are great shows in my opinion and for different reasons.

  • @styleyriley
    @styleyriley Год назад

    How could you pass this up as a kid???? This so amazing!

  • @thresh8086
    @thresh8086 Год назад

    I’m sure you’ve been told this plenty but I love the “Hey, we’ll just start ☺️” for every video 💖

  • @Flastew
    @Flastew Год назад +1

    Thanks for always stirring the imagination with curiosity on things in your videos. Great job young lady.

    • @NoProtocol
      @NoProtocol  Год назад +1

      Hey, thanks for watching (:

  • @thewhat6219
    @thewhat6219 Год назад +5

    I like the look of the Cat's Eye nebula! Nature can be just beautiful on any scale, I figure.
    I don't know any real non-fiction, space-focused book, but I would suggest the Hitchhiker's Guide series to anyone who would hear it.

    • @Lmi.N
      @Lmi.N Год назад +1

      jyotish books of india is oldest astronomy space book, see lal kitab book, parashara hora, bhrighu samitha book about 5000 + year old .

  • @karidrgn
    @karidrgn Год назад +1

    One thing to remember is that light year is the distance that light travels in a year.
    One thing I recommend watching is the series Cosmos. It gives a good summary of key points and history of science. The newer one with Neal DeGrass Tyson notes scientists that most people don't know about but which made key contributions.

    • @laurelbettner6919
      @laurelbettner6919 Год назад

      What is interesting to think about is that a year on earth hasn't been the same since our solar system began and so if you wanted to be technical you could find the average of our planet's shortest revolution compared to its current and you would wind up with a light year several magnitude shorter in overall miles.

  • @brenthenderson3983
    @brenthenderson3983 Год назад +1

    Astronomy has always fascinated me, just thinking about the vastness and what has never been discovered boggles the mind. I certainly missed my calling.

  • @SMOOVKILL1
    @SMOOVKILL1 Год назад

    I think today's going to be a sci fi Sunday. Everything is done, food is cooked, complete relaxation day.

  • @fotiskoutsou2089
    @fotiskoutsou2089 Год назад +1

    Astronomy in mind-blowing, I wish I was there to talk with you for it, it us super interesting and endless! Loved the video waiting for more astro-staff

    • @Lmi.N
      @Lmi.N Год назад

      jyotish books of india is oldest astronomy space book, see lal kitab book, parashara hora, bhrighu samitha book about 5000 + year old .

  • @Mukk13man
    @Mukk13man Год назад

    been watching for a while and the video style and format are pretty refreshing especially the literature recommendations.
    PS I can tell she has a strong father figure just by a video; props to that!

  • @CassieAngelica
    @CassieAngelica Год назад +4

    I am honestly surprised you haven’t seen this one yet, it’s a classic.=)

    • @NoProtocol
      @NoProtocol  Год назад +6

      I need to start watching more astronomy!

    • @Lmi.N
      @Lmi.N Год назад

      jyotish books of india is oldest astronomy space book, see lal kitab book, parashara hora, bhrighu samitha book about 5000 + year old .

    • @CassieAngelica
      @CassieAngelica Год назад

      @@NoProtocol You will not regret it if you do, I promise you!✨

  • @TCHC85
    @TCHC85 Год назад

    Thumbs up for the Enter The Void mention. Great movie.

  • @Twooshort
    @Twooshort Год назад

    Welcome to the space squad! I was surprised I knew most of these (up to the Bootes Void where I lost sense of scale).

  • @invisiblejaguar1
    @invisiblejaguar1 Год назад +1

    This never stops being fascinating. If you want more things like this to blow your mind, I highly recommend a channel called MetaBallStudios.

  • @sailorb3944
    @sailorb3944 Год назад +8

    Hey NoProtocol, I know that I have already requested the Holyfield doc. But after rewatching your last video (1 in a million moments in sports history), I recalled that some time ago I made my own version of that. It is called "1000 Subscribers Special". It is a video where I compiled all of my favorite clips from my favorite sports, and combined them with the most fitting music I could find. It took me over 8 months to finish that video, mostly because I kept adding new and better clips. That video epitomizes my greatest interests. I would be thrilled to see you react to it. I know you may be busy, if that's the case then I'd be thankful if you added it to your requests list. Sorry if you see this for the 2nd time, I just thought you haven't noticed this one before. Have a great day !

    • @Lmi.N
      @Lmi.N Год назад

      jyotish books of india is oldest astronomy space book, see lal kitab book, parashara hora, bhrighu samitha book about 5000 + year old .

  • @Joker-yw9hl
    @Joker-yw9hl Год назад +1

    I think it was CGP Grey who had a really cool video explaining how due to the differing orbits of the planets in our Solar System, Mercury is the closest planet to Earth for the most amount of time during a year, and not just to Earth but to every other planet in our System. Makes me think it must surely have been named Mercury on purpose after the God of Messaging/Travelling/Communication

    • @Twooshort
      @Twooshort Год назад +1

      That video was great, I love the phrase "the mostest closest planet".

  • @PatrickMersinger
    @PatrickMersinger Год назад +1

    And it possible that the universe is even bigger than we think. Looking forward to your next video, and the ones after that too.

    • @Lmi.N
      @Lmi.N Год назад

      jyotish books of india is oldest astronomy space book, see lal kitab book, parashara hora, bhrighu samitha book about 5000 + year old .

  • @trex9263
    @trex9263 Год назад

    The music they chose for this video was perfect.

  • @CitroChannel
    @CitroChannel Год назад

    Respect for the quick Muse reference!

  • @joepiekl
    @joepiekl Год назад +4

    You should watch some of the stuff that Brian Cox did for the BBC. Wonders of the Solar System and Wonders of the Universe were both amazing series.

    • @Lmi.N
      @Lmi.N Год назад

      yotish books of india is oldest astronomy space book, see lal kitab book, parashara hora, bhrighu samitha book about 5000 + year old .

  • @gammaray7778
    @gammaray7778 Год назад

    I love the wonder in your eyes, and the way you think. Very interesting 😊

  • @grahamcarrison6412
    @grahamcarrison6412 Год назад +4

    Kepler 22b orbits around another star in our galaxy, Calisto is a moon of jupiter and Ceres is a dwarf planet that orbits our sun in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter

    • @grahamcarrison6412
      @grahamcarrison6412 Год назад +1

      Proxima Centauri is the closest star to our Sun

    • @Lmi.N
      @Lmi.N Год назад

      jyotish books of india is oldest astronomy space book, see lal kitab book, parashara hora, bhrighu samitha book about 5000 + year old .

  • @marque2127
    @marque2127 Год назад +1

    Correct. The red objects with Uy Scuti are stars. And the dark spots are black holes.

  • @JabberCT
    @JabberCT Год назад +1

    Ceres is a dwarf planet in our solar system. Proxima Centauri is the closest star to our sun. They called it Alpha Centauri, but when they zoomed in, it was actually 3 stars. So Alpha Centauri now refers to the 3 star system. Kepler 22b is a planet found around another star. They've discovered many of these recently. They think almost every star has multiple planets around them just like our sun. Space is awesome lol.

    • @davidcopson5800
      @davidcopson5800 Год назад

      You should have mentioned that planets outside of our solar system are known as exoplanets. Your explanation was very good though.

  • @Mdub_actual
    @Mdub_actual Год назад

    Definitely “new interest unlocked”!

  • @SalamiSelimbo
    @SalamiSelimbo Год назад +1

    ceres is in the asteroid belt, kepler 22b is an exoplanet, proxima centauri is one of the closest star to our solar system, you should watch space video from the channel you previously watch because it's truly interesting

    • @Lmi.N
      @Lmi.N Год назад

      jyotish books of india is oldest astronomy space book, see lal kitab book, parashara hora, bhrighu samitha book about 5000 + year old .

  • @-dubios-
    @-dubios- Год назад +1

    "neptune and uranus are relatively close in size..." 😂

  • @Daslink314
    @Daslink314 Год назад

    I really appreciate this lady she's always interesting I love watching her mind work

  • @kv2315
    @kv2315 Год назад

    like you said, its so humbling to sees something like this even when we see it i think noone can really comprehend the sheer size of the universe. Thinking about that reminds me of the scene at the end of "Men in Black 1" where aliens play with marbles where the marbles contain universes inside them.

  • @mikza29_
    @mikza29_ Год назад +2

    I know someone already suggested you to watch this but I'd like to repropose: Cool Worlds : jurney to the end of the universe.
    I'd love seeing some astronomy videos :)

    • @Lmi.N
      @Lmi.N Год назад

      yotish books of india is oldest astronomy space book, see lal kitab book, parashara hora, bhrighu samitha book about 5000 + year old .

    • @mattsmith5421
      @mattsmith5421 Год назад +1

      ❤ cool world's. I can probably recite that video off the top of my head and watching the end of the earth(my favourite) or the wow signal 45 years later even not smart people like can understand the majority of what he teaches. I fall asleep to their videos every night or sea or history of the earth.

  • @marsrocks247
    @marsrocks247 Год назад

    What is really crazy is that the sheer scale of the universe compared to us is equaled by the sheer scale of us compared to sub-atomic particles. You could legitimately play the whole video back zooming in instead of out just as far - and at the end you'd just have a planck unit of solid blackness filling the screen with zero information.

  • @Robo34
    @Robo34 Год назад

    i remember that our Geography teacher told us the news, that now (~2007) we have one more planet in our solar system, which was recently discovered.

  • @MagsonDare
    @MagsonDare Год назад

    The 4 objects known as Ceres, Pallas, Vesta, and Hygeia were at one point taught as planets when they were newly discovered, but as more planets were found farther out and since they all kinda sorta shared an orbital distance, they got "demoted" to a newly created category of space object called "asteroids" (meaning "star-like" becuz they were so small they appeared as a point of light in an image, just like a star, but.. not a star). Ceres has since been "promoted" to the "dwarf planet" category along with Pluto, Sedna, Eris, Makemake, and so on.
    Callisto is one of the 4 "Galilean Moons" of Jupiter, along with Ganymede, Europa, and Io.
    Kepler 22b is an exo-planets, only recently discovered, so it likely isn't really taught in schools at all.
    Proxima Centauri is a red dwarf star that is so dim that it isn't actually visible to the naked eye. Despite that, it is currently the closest star to our solar system at a distance of 4.24 light years. It orbits the binary star pair that we call Alpha Centauri (making the whole thing a trinary system, obviously), which is a shade farther out at about 4.396 LY.
    Sirius is also called "the dog star" because it's in the "Canis Major" (Big Dog) constellation in the southern hemisphere. It is the brightest star in the sky (ignoring the Sun, obvs ;-) ).
    Vega is the brightest star in the constellation of Libra.
    Arcturus is the brightest northern hemisphere star and has served mankind as a navigational beacon for milennia. it's in the constellation of Bootes, which also has the Bootes Void in that part of the sky too.
    Rigel and Betelgeuse are both in the constellation of Orion, on opposite corners. And yes, the Orion Nebula sits within this constellation also, but just below Orion's belt.
    The other red supergiants featured are dimmer and not really well known, but tend to be included in videos like this due to their sheer size.

  • @kyzer422
    @kyzer422 8 месяцев назад

    I'm a huge astronomy nerd, so I'll try to answer all of your questions here. :)
    2:02 Ceres is a dwarf planet, like Pluto, but there are so many dwarf planets that have been discovered in the last few decades that they usually aren't all taught. Callisto is a moon of Jupiter; there might be more moons than dwarf planets in our solar system. Kepler 22b is an exoplanet, meaning it's a planet in another solar system. And Proxima Centauri is another star altogether, so not part of our solar system either (though it is the closest star to our Sun, and is part of the triple-star system of Alpha Centauri).
    3:04 Not a question, but I can't help pointing out that the Sun is white, not yellow. We only think of it as yellow because it looks that way when viewed during dawn/dusk (when the sunlight passes through more atmosphere and has more blue light filtered out).
    3:50 All the stars with "proper names" (Rigel, Arcturus, Betelgeuse, etc.) can be seen with the naked eye at night - if you know where to look.
    4:18 Yup, that's a black hole. Specifically, a *supermassive* black hole at the centre of another galaxy. And TON 618 is the largest black hole known.

    • @saul_goodman15
      @saul_goodman15 7 месяцев назад +1

      you sir are absolutely right ( im a huge astronomy nerd too :D )

  • @history_by_lamplight
    @history_by_lamplight 10 месяцев назад

    You mentioned existentialist stuff. Thoughts, dread, etc. If you want to go a little bit mad (assuming you aren't already familiar) there's always the Many Worlds Hypothesis (Everett Interpretation), the whole idea that the reality we're living in now is only one of countless realities and universes in an infinite cosmos. Brian Greene is the guy you want to look for (again, if you haven't already). He explains a lot of this stuff - alternate universes, time travel, all that sort of thing. That's one existentialist rabbit hole you might never come out of.

  • @johanneswetzler2861
    @johanneswetzler2861 Год назад

    When you feel so small, remember for a proton you're a GALAXY.

  • @halwakka504
    @halwakka504 Год назад

    Voyager I was launched over 45 years ago, was further than Pluto's orbit over 30 years ago, and is currently the most distant human-made object. NASA estimates that Voyager will be finally out of our solar system in 15,000 to 28,000 years (we're still not sure how far out the Oort cloud extends so the estimates vary greatly). And this is one of the hundreds of billions of solar systems in our galaxy alone. The vastness of our universe is absolutely mindblowing once you start looking at what little we know of it.

  • @Stogie2112
    @Stogie2112 Год назад

    Saturn is the coolest planet in our system for two reasons:
    1. Its amazing ring system.
    2. It is massive but not very dense. Build a large enough bathtub, fill it with water, and Saturn would float in it!

  • @BillTheScribe
    @BillTheScribe Год назад

    -The Kepler project examined a small area of the sky and looked at a small area of the sky and looked for any stars that appeared to either dip in brightness or wobble in ways that implies there was a planet going around them. It found hundreds. They are If you see a name like Kepler 22 b, it means that is was the "b" or second planet from the star.
    -Proxima Centauri is the closest star to us (other than the sun). It's a red dwarf about 4 light years away, and part of the Alpha Centauri group of stars.
    -Sirius is the brightest star in our sky, it's also very close.
    -Arcturus is a red giant. If you go out in the supper and look more or less straight up (from the mid-northern hemisphere) just after sunset, it will be one of the first stars you see. It's visibly orange which cuts through the blue sky well.
    -The Cats' Eye and Helix Nebulae are planetary nebulae and are what results from a dying star blowing off it's outer layers.
    -The Orion Nebula is a star factory where new stars are being made. If you can see Orion's Belt (typically a winter thing), there are three stars that make up the sword hanging from it. This nebula is the middle star in the sword.
    -Omega Centauri is a globular cluster visible form the Southern Hemisphere and low parts of the Northern. Globular clusters are huge, densely packed balls of stars that date back to the start of the galaxy. The Milky way has hundreds of them. One of the easiest to see in the North is M13 in Hercules. It's a summer object, and you'll need Binoculars, but it's easy to find.

  • @alolkoydesigns
    @alolkoydesigns Год назад

    Vega is where the transmissions came from in the 1997 movie Contact starring Jodie Foster, written by Carl Sagan

  • @Unknownstl1
    @Unknownstl1 Год назад +1

    VFX Artist Reveals the True Scale of the Universe and VFX Artist Reveals the True Scale of Atoms both by Corridor Crew are really cool videos to show the size of certain things.

  • @NandR
    @NandR Год назад

    The nebula they were showing are where large clouds of gas and dust are illuminated by dead stars that sent shockwaves outwards as they died. Usually leaving behind a white dwarf the is white hot but very small. Also illuminated by new stars that formed from the resulting waves travelling through the dust. Those new stars are seeded with heavier elements than can form during a normal nuclear fusion in a star, such as uranium. The orion nebula is visible from most places once you find the constellation Orion. It is beautiful with a telescope. Hubble formed a 3D image of it during it's long observations of it.

  • @robhallam8047
    @robhallam8047 Год назад

    .....MIND BLOWN!!!!!

  • @Trigga_47
    @Trigga_47 Год назад +1

    Nice Reaction. You can also react to Roko's basilisk, it is an interesting theory about the future of AI.

  • @Mad9977
    @Mad9977 Год назад

    yeah they added all known planets (stars) of the universe for that comparison

  • @cadleo
    @cadleo Год назад

    5:53 yep. the first time I saw one of your vids ;)

  • @Schaelarren
    @Schaelarren Год назад

    Ceres is a Dwarf Planet in the Asteroid belt, Callisto is one of Jupiter's moons, Kepler 22b is an exoplanet, and Proxima centauri is a red dwarf.

  • @jamesstewart9523
    @jamesstewart9523 Год назад

    "New Interest Unlocked" Sounds like a reference to Unreal Tournament 2004 (video game) 🤣🤣🤣

  • @JaredTVW
    @JaredTVW Год назад

    I remember Callisto being one of the several moons that orbit Jupiter. I played this Space game in middle school and many moons had those names like “Kepler 22” and some had names that also came from mythology, like Callisto.

  • @lxvleygxcha1004
    @lxvleygxcha1004 Год назад

    Great video reaction. I love the shirt. Do you have merch? Cheers from Wisconsin.

    • @NoProtocol
      @NoProtocol  Год назад +2

      No, the shirt is from the Smithsonian. I bought it a long time ago but maybe they still sell similar items lol

    • @Lmi.N
      @Lmi.N Год назад

      @@NoProtocol jyotish books of india is oldest astronomy space book, see lal kitab book, parashara hora, bhrighu samitha book about 5000 + year old .

    • @lxvleygxcha1004
      @lxvleygxcha1004 Год назад

      @No Protocol ok, well, I don't think I can make it anytime soon. But maybe you could put something similar together and sell it.

  • @crowttubebot3075
    @crowttubebot3075 Год назад

    For a RUclips recommendation, may I recommend Dr. Becky? She is a UK astronomer and her enthusiasm is contagious. Her monthly videos about what is going to be n the night sky is the one I go to to find out where I will be pointing my binoculars in the coming weeks.

  • @mina_en_suiza
    @mina_en_suiza Год назад

    Have you ever watched the "Metric Paper" video, which is not really about paper but a voyage from our scale to the smallest and then to the biggest things, there are? I love it and so do my kids.

  • @jerrykinworthy9225
    @jerrykinworthy9225 Год назад

    Yea I love everything space and universe related but as soon as I start watching something about it I have an existential crisis followed by a mid-life crisis and I'm not even middle aged, it's a pre-midlife crisis lol. Because you realize how just how brief you are.

  • @demonicrebellion6903
    @demonicrebellion6903 Год назад

    Nebulas and black holes have always and likely will always fascinate me, endlessly.

  • @quixote6942
    @quixote6942 Год назад

    The Ones that show the "Textures" are planets in our Solar System (Because they're reflecting the Sun's light). The Planets that are "on Fire" are Stars outside our System (we see them because they're Creating their own light (and, as you see) are MUCH Bigger than our Sun.
    Astronomy is a fun hobby! GREAT Reaction!
    They have several RUclips videos that show "Our Visible Universe" and all the Planets within... Mind Boggling! Are we alone? You have to question that after watching them!

  • @EarlYorkII
    @EarlYorkII Год назад

    She’s so pretty its really the main reason I click on these videos. But I also love how she just gets right to the videos

  • @carloszestyboy2901
    @carloszestyboy2901 Год назад

    Ceres is a protoplanet, Kepler-22b is an exoplanet orbiting Kepler-22, a star very similar to our sun (97% it’s size) about 600 light-years away. Proxima Centauri is the star closest to us apart from our sun, about 4.2 light-years away. It’s a tiny and cold red star.

  • @stumpypetros2685
    @stumpypetros2685 Год назад

    Howdy! Thank you SO much for your reactions and very intelligent questions.
    Have you seen the video on "Aristotle's Wheel Paradox - To Infinity and Beyond"? Two wheels, Two infinities with a bit of humour.
    Thanks!

  • @rift8966
    @rift8966 Год назад +3

    Ceres and Calysto are either moons or dwarf planets in our solar system (can't remember), Kepler 22b is a "super Earth" in another solar system. Proxima Centauri is our closest star (and this is 1 of two stars, as it's a binary system?).

    • @thehoogard
      @thehoogard Год назад +1

      Cereis is a dwarf planet in the asteroid belt. Callista one of the four galileon moons of jupiter. Proxima Centauri is one of three stars in the Alpha Centauri system. The A and B stars dominate that system though.

    • @rift8966
      @rift8966 Год назад

      @@thehoogard Thanks for the clarification. 😁

    • @Lmi.N
      @Lmi.N Год назад

      jyotish books of india is oldest astronomy space book, see lal kitab book, parashara hora, bhrighu samitha book about 5000 + year old .

  • @davidcopson5800
    @davidcopson5800 Год назад

    This video should be titled 'Satellite, Planet, Star and Galaxy Size Comparison'. It does not compare our universe with another universe.

  • @paiute6911
    @paiute6911 Год назад

    Awesome! I hope you are enjoying “One Hundred Years Of Solitude,” I am currently reading “War And Peace” by Leo Tolstoy,” and “Helgoland,” by Carlo Rovelli.
    P.S. That shirt is sick! (At First I thought it was a “Space Jam” shirt.

    • @NoProtocol
      @NoProtocol  Год назад +3

      I’ve read Tolstoy but not Rovelli! I’m liking the book so far, it’s not what I expected but I like the pacing. I had to start writing down the names to get through that family tree though lol
      Also, thanks about the shirt (:

    • @paiute6911
      @paiute6911 Год назад

      I have to do the same thing sometimes with William Faulkner books to keep the family tree straight.

  • @Joao-pb4ep
    @Joao-pb4ep Год назад

    You should check "Timelapse of the future" if you haven't yet. What is most interesting is the field of speculation of the further future uncertainty which could bring a lot of philosophical questions.

  • @KurNorock
    @KurNorock Год назад

    Keppler 22b is a planet from another solar system. And while you were in school, it probably wasn't discovered yet.
    Calisto is one of the many moons of Jupiter.
    Proxima Centari is the closest star to the sun.
    Lastly, the numbers given are the diameter of the objects. So if one object has twice the diameter of another, it isn't twice as large, it is actually 8 times larger by volume.
    But since different objects have different densities, the actual masses can vary wildly. For example, Jupiter only looks a little bit larger than Saturn, but it is 3x the mass.

  • @AeipoxPlays
    @AeipoxPlays Год назад

    If you haven't watched "Black Hole vs Stars MASS AND SIZES" yet, it's a pretty decent video about just how much mass is within most of these black holes.

  • @daveterret3958
    @daveterret3958 Год назад

    I would imagine it's high time for people who teach kids Astronomy to start including a lot more than the 8 planets of the Solar System. Our knowledge is much greater than it was around 25-30 years ago. It's a great time to be an astronomer.

  • @Thomas.deNorth
    @Thomas.deNorth Год назад

    Have you seen any of the Metaball Studios videos? Excellent and fun comparison videos.

  • @Khaos768
    @Khaos768 Год назад +1

    Planets revolve around the sun, satellites like Ceres, Io and our own moon revolve around planets or other objects. Also, I suggest the channel MetaBallStudios for some great size-comparison videos.

    • @Lmi.N
      @Lmi.N Год назад

      jyotish books of india is oldest astronomy space book, see lal kitab book, parashara hora, bhrighu samitha book about 5000 + year old .

  • @Scumdrops420
    @Scumdrops420 Год назад

    Enter the Void is a crazy movie.

  • @GuitarOwnsDrums
    @GuitarOwnsDrums Год назад

    I recommend a channel called SEA, either for the channel or just for your private viewing. It's a great channel that talks about space phenomena

  • @xXxXx-----xXxXx
    @xXxXx-----xXxXx Год назад

    You have to react to " How the universe is way bigger than you think" for full astronomy / existential mind blow

  • @dougj7295
    @dougj7295 Год назад

    Did you say Beetle Juice. As a kid, Pluto was always the most interesting planet because it was the furthest & we knew so little about it - now they have just kicked it to the curb.

  • @TechToWatch
    @TechToWatch Год назад

    100 Years of Solitude by Marquez is a great book. Love in the Time of Cholera also. If you like Sci Fi I suggest you look at Iain M Banks ( who also wrote great non sci fi novels as Iain Banks), and Neil Stephenson

  • @mandingo9999998
    @mandingo9999998 Год назад

    What just as crazy as size, is the time delay. A star a hundred light years away, your seeing it as it was 100 years ago. Even our own sun, it takes 8 minutes for light to get to earth. When you look up, your seeing the past, not the present.

  • @bakersmileyface
    @bakersmileyface Год назад

    I want to recommend the channel 'History of the Universe' for some theoretical physics, particle physics and astronomy stuff since we're going into space now.

  • @astrictus7123
    @astrictus7123 Год назад

    a show that plays around with some of these names is "the expanse" if interested

  • @davester1432
    @davester1432 Год назад +2

    It's almost humbling (almost) to think that all of that revolves around ME. 😁

    • @Lmi.N
      @Lmi.N Год назад

      jyotish books of india is oldest astronomy space book, see lal kitab book, parashara hora, bhrighu samitha book about 5000 + year old .

    • @davester1432
      @davester1432 Год назад

      @@Lmi.N Stop spamming everybody on this thread.

  • @danthebev
    @danthebev Год назад +1

    You should watch "VFX Artist Reveals the True Scale of the Universe" they do it on a scale that makes more sense and blows my mind even further.