I can’t tell you how privileged I feel to be alive during this time of discovery. These images boggle the mind. So big. So many. So far far far away. I especially liked the last part where we turned the lenses on the Earth. We couldn’t reach out there in a thousand lifetimes, so let’s focus on the little blue ball that keeps us all alive. Here endeth the sermon.
you can't look to the end of time using Hubble. Hubble (in fact any telescope) only ever looks back into time, into the past. which is the beginning of time, not the end.
The one, and only, time I ever took psilocybin mushrooms was the single most profound, humbling, and meaningful spiritual experience of my entire life, by far. Everything they talked about in this presentation was laid bare in the most excruciatingly lucid manner possible. I could literally FEEL the deep deep evolutionary time of the cosmos. I could FEEL the massively complex and interconnected biosphere. Psilocybin is a massive antidote to our current apathy and lack of connection to reality.
Shouldn't this be titled "Looking To The Beginning Of Time"? The photons coming from these far-away galaxies left their places of origin billions of years ago.
Reisha - My first thought too. We can look into the past, not into the future, even if we assume that time is circular. Esteban and William seem to think that astrophysics is an esoteric discipline. Geez!
I'd like to see what happens if you project the distant galaxies into the future, by a scaled simulation, to give an idea what the stars might look like now, if time were removed as a factor.
I love the comments on this video. Everyone is very courteous, nice, and humble (unlike most of RUclips). This is what space exploration can do for humanity.
You might be interested in the new deep field image Hubble took this year called the "hubble extreme deep field". It adds data from a new near-infrared instrument to gather light of greater redshifts (thus earlier in time). Cheers.
the hubble telescope and its pictures are the very reason humanity is evolving into greater beings w greater knowledge, understating ,imagination, and hope more than ever
We are seeing faint light from galaxy clusters that may have ceased to exist, for all we know, since the light has taken billions of years to reach us. We may never know for sure.
_"We may never know for sure"_ But we don't know otherwise either... we don't know of any galaxy that has ever died... we know they merge with others and change shape as they do... also as their stars have changed since the first stars formed about 200 million years after the Big Bang. And even if they don't merge with other's they probably change with time because it seems obvious that some features in their shape are evidence of ongoing change. So, for all we know, Galaxies may never cease to exist, only merge and become new galaxies. Also as galactic clusters also merge and new galaxies may become available for merging and renewing. It's also known that supernova stars release dust and gas clouds that become material for new star formations so the cycle may be endless and galaxies may never die or even last the lifetime of the Universe, however endless or everlasting it may be.
YEAH, ACTUALLY WE DO KNOW. NOTHING GETS PAST THE SKY. THE SKY IS THE LIMIT. THERE IS NO "SPACE.'' ITS ALL BULLSHIT TO SUPPORT THE EVOLUTION THEORY AND TO HIDE GOD. ROCKETS ARE JUST MYLAR BALLOONS WITH ROCKET ENGINES. LOOK HOW SLOWLY THEY LAUNCH. ROCKETS CANT HOVER. NOTHING GETS PAST THE SKY.
@vladibo88 - The composers call themselves "MoveTwo". The last song 10:13 is "Touch the Sky". I think the song that begins at about 3:50 is actually a different movement of the same song. The music credits are shown at 10:50.
Some claims are funy, the speed of light is the same regardless of inertial, acceleration and superposition, and then the beggining of time. There is a great difference between time determining the begginings and ends of relative phenomena through (energy coordination and regulations, gravitational frameworks and networks, action processes and mechanisms) and the beginning and end of time! Just some sense of logical claims
I think about space on a daily basis. That's all there ever has been (maybe) That's all there ever will be (maybe) We are so insignificant. I don't know how to describe this feeling
Why feel so small, you are personally the singularly most complex living and thinking organism that we have ever witnessed and beyond what we can imagine to find anywhere in the galaxy. you live on a planet of living organisms that is vast and amazing. You may be physically small, yet you are amazingly unique. And the fact that you have the capacity to learn and cumulate knowledge as a human race is unique even to earth organisms, passing your knowledge and skills to generations after you, in a manner far superior to any other organism that has ever existed. As far as we know, we may indeed be uniquely alone, but even if we are not, you are truly amazing.
KotiChennayya I don’t think so, but humans ability to pass knowledge down to new generations makes our knowledge cumulative. Some great videos with this perspective here on you tube. With all we have learned, and that knowledge being constant recorded, I’d say we are a pretty cool species. In the meanwhile, our bodies aren’t worth much past a hundred years or so. Maybe this is the design, everybody gets a shot at living for a while and hopefully contributing something to the pile.....
We're not "LIVING IN A SIMULATION." .... That's a popular delusion, thank you Matrix Movies. ... The Message of The Matrix is not that we're IN a simulation. ... It's that we're currently volunteering to be SUCKED INTO ONE by our internet devices and the empty ILLUSION of "Social Media? .
We'll never be able to see the beginning of anything in space. By the time the light of any object billions of light years away reaches us, it might not even be there, anymore. We are sooo limited , down under, and up in the heavens, that all we can do is speculate, guess, imagine, suppose and theorize.
@RedOrangeSystem I assume it moves itself to counteract the Earth's motion in the same way your eye can look at one thing even when you turn your head.
The second law of thermodynamics says in part that energy in a closed system cannot be created or destroyed; it can only be transferred. Assuming the universe is a closed system, then what is has always been and will always be. If the universe is expanding, into what is it expanding?
In General Relativity space bends and warps and expands. Space stretches in its expansion the way anything stretches in the everyday world. It appears that the universe is infinitely large and has no edge or limit. If it's expanding into anything, it's so far beyond the observable universe that it's irrelevant in science, since it's unknown and unknowable. Philosophers and theologians have a field day with this scientifically meaningless question though. Conservation of energy in any conventional sense does not apply to the expansion of the universe. The electromagnetic energy lost in the redshift of light apparently just disappears. It doesn't obviously go anywhere. It's one of the fundamental criticisms of big bang cosmology, except it's one that the big bang deniers seldom take note of. In fact, it just appears that the conservation of energy does not apply to General Relativity.
@JosephW99 we aren't looking in an actual direction necessarily, but since light's speed is finite, something that is 12 billion light years away has light that is just getting to us now from 12 billion years ago. That is, father objects appear as they did closer to the big bang.
As a non-physicist, I have wondered for a long time about the relationship between gravity and spin; as there appears to be no aspect of creation[al] forces that does not involve spin - orbital at the large scale and centrifugal at the smaller?
I have to do some research, I have my own theories regarding north and south compasswise of the Milky way and confused myself when it comes to what we're looking at in the sky. Is it something we are seeing outside our Galaxy or is it inside our Galaxy. Also, when you look at Hubble images, sometimes they are artist's conceptions. I feel that artists have no place where we put a telescope to see what it's actually like in many different wavelengths, AND for millions of dollars.
So ? What are we ? we live for such a short time. Thinking about what is beyond that, frightens me and keeps me awake at nights. It has done so ever since I was a child , it still frightens me today and I'm in my 60's a kind of fear instilled in my DNA. Like animals fear fire, or prey fear predators. The fear of realizing that we are NOTHING BUT A FLEEING THOUGHT. s
Each time it comes around the earth, it takes a moment to stabilize and continues the exposure, adding the information from each orbit to the same image. The idea is that with each exposure, every photon hitting a pixel increases the amplitude of that pixel. So reorienting is an extremely precise process.
As far as I know, a bigger telescope won't necessarily let you look further back in time. You can only look so far as the earliest light that reaches us. I believe the earliest light that has reached us is from about 13.7 billion years ago, which is part of the reason why scientists think that the universe began "shortly" before that. I don't think we can see the big bang itself, at least not as light, because the universe was probably opaque at first and there were no sources of light. Only after several thousand years the first stars would form creating the first light and some time after that the first galaxies. When studying the beginning of the universe, one of the things scientists look at is the Cosmic Microwave Background. This radiation completely surrounds us (it's literally coming from every direction) and is therefore thought to originate from the very beginning.
SO which anniversary was it then? It's like 20th birdthday, but 15 years of scanning. Or are the anniversaries on different days? Thanks clarifying the matter anyhowz.
I've always thought the universe is just the inside of a enormous creature. And the stars, galaxies, planets and all, are just parts of the inside of its body. I mean it is all alive, right. And we are just tiny cells inside it's body. Were so small we can't see what the huge being really is. Like a ant looking at us. And this creature is just one of many, and it goes on and on, forever.
my religion is science... it explains so much, and its not 'maybes, or buts and ifs' but hard facts, we can see there are more galexies in a pinprick of the sky than we ever imagined. Its almost 99.99% sure that there are planets out there that would harbour life in some form. Shame they are so far away that we will never know without some kind of 'warp speed', or 'worm hole' access.
@JosephW99 Well PsyogiBottoms explained why looking farther away is equivalent to looking farther back in time. But for the direction: there is no single location or direction from us at which the big bang occurred. It was an expansion of space, not matter, so in a sense it "happened everywhere". It's like a person living on the surface of a balloon asking where the expansion happens when someone blows it up.
Space-time is churned by rotating bodies How can then space-time has a beginning in the absence of bodies matlab your space-time entangled to singularity of bodies
I'm no astronomer but the best analogy I've heard is the expanding universe is like rising (bread) dough. If you imagine you are in a particular place in the dough everything is moving (rising) away from you as you see it.
@@SB-oi7qo the only problem with that is you have to keep adding something as in your analogy with yeast and bread it keeps adding carbon dioxide i know it is not creating it but it is producing it and I don't think the stars are adding anything
Each image of each galaxy is existing in a different time. So if you travel toward one of the galaxies the images would change as if someone was painting a picture of the galaxy each day and sending it towards us. As you travel you would pass the images and they would change , becoming closer to what is going on now(the same now that you exsist in) but the now you are heading towards cannot be seen until you get there.
I question it alot and i love short videos like this to get my brain thinking about what essentially is the most important questions that we can ever ask. Humanity is so ungreatful on the whole, we are more worried about war, religion and other pointless things... lets focus our resources, intelligence and time to this shit and we would get alot further in developing our knowledge and understanding!
If there were any time in human history we knew for sure we are not in the middle of everything , it is now. This stuff makes me feel so small I cannot even convey it.
Yes, crazy that God created mankind in his own image and allowed his creation reign over all the creatures of the earth. We are supposed to be the keeper of Gods Creation. Instead we squander it. Abuse it, destroy it and prove to God we are not worthy of his Son's forgiveness of our sins even though Thats exactly what he has done to those that put their faith in Jesus. God's only Son. Born of man, incarnate, being of one with the father Whom died so that we might find salvation through the sacrament of blood and body given through Christ's body to atone for our sins and have life ever lasting.
These pictures of the universe encourage the imagination, as they convey the message of the creator, saying, size can be infinite in proportion, and he understands beauty, whilst we can only appreciate it. He never seizes to impress us in the mind, on the street, on earth, and even out there in space. Hope we meet again in good time, till then, we toil in the mud over here, as we prepare our own galaxy. Praise be to God, the Chief Architect Of Project Good.
OK, so Hubble was launched in 1990? Or is that a wikipedia mistake? I've also seen Hubble 20th anniversary vids so I'm kind of stumped. So it looks like this vid is 5 years old? You should mention that in the description.
Hubble telescope. Whatever what we see through this telescope is an old images/past happening. If an image is a million light years distance, this image what we are seeing through telescope is also a million year old past. Am I correct?
Looking to the End of Time ??? End or Beginning? 4:38 Hubble Ultra Deep Field image on left. Artist's depiction on right. 4:47 artist's simulation of big bang. Plus British accented narrator's summary of big bang theory and postulated dark matter with electro-beat music background. Hence, it must be true. 5:40 the universe's "dark age" looks bright with stars. Any 12 Billion year old spiral galaxies? By the way, how much time does a spiral galaxy need to form and rotate? The alternating ACS and NICMOS images were well displayed.
@smpaudio my point was that i wasnt being literal, which is actually the second tangent in the convo with tenebrous. my 1st point was that science is being thwarted by it's own methodology which tends to ignore anything that it cannot quantify, and secondly by individuals such as yourselves who really think consumer technology is an actual indication of our achievements and a third point which i know will only lead to conjecture. im no flat earther, though hollow planets do sound appealing XD
40 billion probable life supporting planets in our galaxy. Considering the trouble 7 billion humans is causing on Earth, I say its time to concentrate humankinds efforts to getting off this rock. In the long run, it is ultimately our only choice.
Yeah, with careful choices we can alter our solar system and live in our own solar system on another planet or two. There are alot of resources here.We may have to move a couple of planets into a nearby orbit but, if done carefully we can live on to the point our technology overrides any care of our demise, like our visiting buddies from space that are studying us for their own use.
D J problems would be same if we had too many of any one species on the earth. Most likely we will do something to get a good sized chunk of us killed at some point, and reset things for a while. The earth ends the same no matter what, we get swallowed into a dying star. Humans, zebras, mosquitoes, it all goes. Stop being so hard on a species that has been so good at survival that we have overpopulated ourselves. And if we do find a way to get off this rock, please don’t take the mosquitos to the new place.....
that is true, but, if you base the mathematics on a perpetual steady state with no beginning you find the currents thru observed space would account for apparent motion as well as variation in the background radiation and Doppler. its sort of like looking at a large river. from your view you draw draw all data but the river exists before you and after. though you cant see the rest it can approximated from apparent vectors in the part you observe. except the Universe is 11 dimensional, of course.
To extend our vision, you don't only need a supercrisp mirror, you also have to increase your exposure time- perhaps a glimpse into ourselves is no longer adequate.
I can’t tell you how privileged I feel to be alive during this time of discovery. These images boggle the mind. So big. So many. So far far far away. I especially liked the last part where we turned the lenses on the Earth. We couldn’t reach out there in a thousand lifetimes, so let’s focus on the little blue ball that keeps us all alive. Here endeth the sermon.
you can't look to the end of time using Hubble. Hubble (in fact any telescope) only ever looks back into time, into the past. which is the beginning of time, not the end.
Agreed. I wonder what they meant. I didn't understand "looking to the end of time." Telescopes look back, just like you said.
True my friend
The one, and only, time I ever took psilocybin mushrooms was the single most profound, humbling, and meaningful spiritual experience of my entire life, by far.
Everything they talked about in this presentation was laid bare in the most excruciatingly lucid manner possible.
I could literally FEEL the deep deep evolutionary time of the cosmos.
I could FEEL the massively complex and interconnected biosphere.
Psilocybin is a massive antidote to our current apathy and lack of connection to reality.
I never get tired of these documentaries about space and the universe.... I wish there was some way we could figure out how to start exploring space!
Still waiting for the James Web- it's a decade late.
More than a decade
I’d rather it be delayed over it breaking apart in space or on launch.
It's up now! :)
Shouldn't this be titled "Looking To The Beginning Of Time"? The photons coming from these far-away galaxies left their places of origin billions of years ago.
The end is the beginning!
if we can see the beginning, we can see the end, by seeing the beginning, we know the end. esteban is exactly right.
Reisha - My first thought too. We can look into the past, not into the future, even if we assume that time is circular. Esteban and William seem to think that astrophysics is an esoteric discipline. Geez!
There’s no beginning and there is no end. Only mankind’s dumb assumptions.
@@out2lunch4
Leave esoteric claptrap out of this.
The end of time.... when we get there we will find more time.
An old man in a bowler cap standing under a street lamp. And a Koala that teaches magic.
You'll never get there
valjean76 are you high or what
A confetti that sprung frogs and butterflies. I met those gentleman who sell the top hat and white gloves
Beautiful video, truly breathtaking, thanks for uploading !
I'd like to see what happens if you project the distant galaxies into the future, by a scaled simulation, to give an idea what the stars might look like now, if time were removed as a factor.
I love the comments on this video. Everyone is very courteous, nice, and humble (unlike most of RUclips). This is what space exploration can do for humanity.
You might be interested in the new deep field image Hubble took this year called the "hubble extreme deep field". It adds data from a new near-infrared instrument to gather light of greater redshifts (thus earlier in time). Cheers.
Thanks 👍👍
the hubble telescope and its pictures are the very reason humanity is evolving into greater beings w greater knowledge, understating ,imagination, and hope more than ever
What kind of camera takes these photos.Hasselblad was on the moon with film.Amazing.
It is a privilege to live in this time. To have access to this knowledge.
We are seeing faint light from galaxy clusters that may have ceased to exist, for all we know, since the light has taken billions of years to reach us. We may never know for sure.
_"We may never know for sure"_
But we don't know otherwise either... we don't know of any galaxy that has ever died... we know they merge with others and change shape as they do... also as their stars have changed since the first stars formed about 200 million years after the Big Bang.
And even if they don't merge with other's they probably change with time because it seems obvious that some features in their shape are evidence of ongoing change.
So, for all we know, Galaxies may never cease to exist, only merge and become new galaxies. Also as galactic clusters also merge and new galaxies may become available for merging and renewing. It's also known that supernova stars release dust and gas clouds that become material for new star formations so the cycle may be endless and galaxies may never die or even last the lifetime of the Universe, however endless or everlasting it may be.
YEAH, ACTUALLY WE DO KNOW. NOTHING GETS PAST THE SKY. THE SKY IS THE LIMIT. THERE IS NO "SPACE.'' ITS ALL BULLSHIT TO SUPPORT THE EVOLUTION THEORY AND TO HIDE GOD. ROCKETS ARE JUST MYLAR BALLOONS WITH ROCKET ENGINES. LOOK HOW SLOWLY THEY LAUNCH. ROCKETS CANT HOVER. NOTHING GETS PAST THE SKY.
@@Guitarman7133 ??
@@michellemarieperez6574 Yes, Michelle? What is it? Do you really think we live on a ball spinning in space? WE AINT MOVING.
Lenow please makes me a favor. Tell me who provided your Mary Juana ?
Where did the first matter come from?
@vladibo88 - The composers call themselves "MoveTwo". The last song 10:13 is "Touch the Sky". I think the song that begins at about 3:50 is actually a different movement of the same song. The music credits are shown at 10:50.
"Until the James Webb Telescope is launched 2011." Me, laughing in 2022 after the JWST was just launched.
😄
Me laughing in ultra Blu ray hd 1020p LCD technical jargon gigawatts
Time is an illusion. It's a measure of change and distance
Amazing!!!
Oh! No it's not an illusion because when i'm late home my wife let me know it....and that's not and illusion!!!!!
Some claims are funy, the speed of light is the same regardless of inertial, acceleration and superposition, and then the beggining of time. There is a great difference between time determining the begginings and ends of relative phenomena through (energy coordination and regulations, gravitational frameworks and networks, action processes and mechanisms) and the beginning and end of time! Just some sense of logical claims
Yep. @4:40: "re-heated the cold dark universe"? Inaccurate and unscientific this vid might be, it surely generated a lot of views
I think about space on a daily basis.
That's all there ever has been (maybe)
That's all there ever will be (maybe)
We are so insignificant.
I don't know how to describe this feeling
It's called searching for God...
on quantum level we have universes inside us
Why feel so small, you are personally the singularly most complex living and thinking organism that we have ever witnessed and beyond what we can imagine to find anywhere in the galaxy. you live on a planet of living organisms that is vast and amazing. You may be physically small, yet you are amazingly unique. And the fact that you have the capacity to learn and cumulate knowledge as a human race is unique even to earth organisms, passing your knowledge and skills to generations after you, in a manner far superior to any other organism that has ever existed. As far as we know, we may indeed be uniquely alone, but even if we are not, you are truly amazing.
@@markg7963 r we immortal ?
KotiChennayya I don’t think so, but humans ability to pass knowledge down to new generations makes our knowledge cumulative. Some great videos with this perspective here on you tube. With all we have learned, and that knowledge being constant recorded, I’d say we are a pretty cool species. In the meanwhile, our bodies aren’t worth much past a hundred years or so. Maybe this is the design, everybody gets a shot at living for a while and hopefully contributing something to the pile.....
We could be living in a simulation or nature could be as amazing as we see.
We're not "LIVING IN A SIMULATION." .... That's a popular delusion, thank you Matrix Movies. ... The Message of The Matrix is not that we're IN a simulation. ... It's that we're currently volunteering to be SUCKED INTO ONE by our internet devices and the empty ILLUSION of "Social Media? .
James Webb in 2011??? If they only knew!
Who is " they"?
Eagerly awaiting for JAMES WEBB & It's UNMATCHED PERFORMANCE & Results
Ashutosh Sonar when are these images due.
Me too
@EnemyN666 I think there's dust in the way blocking out the big bang. Also after the big bang before star formation there wasn't really light to see?
Wonderful images from Hubble. Thanks to all who made it possible.
We'll never be able to see the beginning of anything in space. By the time the light of any object billions of light years away reaches us, it might not even be there, anymore. We are sooo limited , down under, and up in the heavens, that all we can do is speculate, guess, imagine, suppose and theorize.
@RedOrangeSystem I assume it moves itself to counteract the Earth's motion in the same way your eye can look at one thing even when you turn your head.
Where can I download the last piece of music in this video?
The second law of thermodynamics says in part that energy in a closed system cannot be created or destroyed; it can only be transferred. Assuming the universe is a closed system, then what is has always been and will always be. If the universe is expanding, into what is it expanding?
In General Relativity space bends and warps and expands. Space stretches in its expansion the way anything stretches in the everyday world. It appears that the universe is infinitely large and has no edge or limit. If it's expanding into anything, it's so far beyond the observable universe that it's irrelevant in science, since it's unknown and unknowable. Philosophers and theologians have a field day with this scientifically meaningless question though.
Conservation of energy in any conventional sense does not apply to the expansion of the universe. The electromagnetic energy lost in the redshift of light apparently just disappears. It doesn't obviously go anywhere. It's one of the fundamental criticisms of big bang cosmology, except it's one that the big bang deniers seldom take note of. In fact, it just appears that the conservation of energy does not apply to General Relativity.
8:22 lol... the james webb telescope did not go up in 2011.. it is 2019 and it still didnt go up yet... what's the hold up??
The shuttle was retired. World dominance, star wars, has taken priority.
It's looking at the BEGINNING of time.
@JosephW99 we aren't looking in an actual direction necessarily, but since light's speed is finite, something that is 12 billion light years away has light that is just getting to us now from 12 billion years ago. That is, father objects appear as they did closer to the big bang.
Isn't it actually the beginning of time?
As a non-physicist, I have wondered for a long time about the relationship between gravity and spin; as there appears to be no aspect of creation[al] forces that does not involve spin - orbital at the large scale and centrifugal at the smaller?
I love the music in this video. I wonder what the name of it is?
I have to do some research, I have my own theories regarding north and south compasswise of the Milky way and confused myself when it comes to what we're looking at in the sky. Is it something we are seeing outside our Galaxy or is it inside our Galaxy. Also, when you look at Hubble images, sometimes they are artist's conceptions. I feel that artists have no place where we put a telescope to see what it's actually like in many different wavelengths, AND for millions of dollars.
@RedOrangeSystem
Its motion around the earth has no effect, it just needs to keep looking in the same direction. It has gyroscopes to do that.
@VWLPT The score was written by Movetwo. They're a German duo, I think.
4:10 and what's behind/beyond that???
So ? What are we ? we live for such a short time. Thinking about what is beyond that, frightens me and keeps me awake at nights. It has done so ever since I was a child , it still frightens me today and I'm in my 60's a kind of fear instilled in my DNA. Like animals fear fire, or prey fear predators. The fear of realizing that we are NOTHING BUT A FLEEING THOUGHT.
s
@@ernestoarmendariz7949 interesting perspective
A truly awe-inspiring project!
How does the Telescope keep focused on one small area whilst it is orbiting Earth?
Each time it comes around the earth, it takes a moment to stabilize and continues the exposure, adding the information from each orbit to the same image. The idea is that with each exposure, every photon hitting a pixel increases the amplitude of that pixel. So reorienting is an extremely precise process.
From what universe is covered??
BEAUTIFUL!
When you start listening to stuff like this it shows you how small we are on the extremely large scale
Is it possible with larger scope to see back in time to the big bang. If we could see the beginning of time 16 billions years ago??
As far as I know, a bigger telescope won't necessarily let you look further back in time. You can only look so far as the earliest light that reaches us. I believe the earliest light that has reached us is from about 13.7 billion years ago, which is part of the reason why scientists think that the universe began "shortly" before that. I don't think we can see the big bang itself, at least not as light, because the universe was probably opaque at first and there were no sources of light. Only after several thousand years the first stars would form creating the first light and some time after that the first galaxies.
When studying the beginning of the universe, one of the things scientists look at is the Cosmic Microwave Background. This radiation completely surrounds us (it's literally coming from every direction) and is therefore thought to originate from the very beginning.
SO which anniversary was it then? It's like 20th birdthday, but 15 years of scanning. Or are the anniversaries on different days?
Thanks clarifying the matter anyhowz.
How old is this video? I was just wondering because the James Webb Space Telescope isn't scheduled for launch until 2014 now.
The cosmos is so beautiful, it's wonderful
Sweet as! I cant believe all the different types of galaxies out there!
It's actually looking to the beginning of time
that first zoom was AWSOME
That is so amazing! love the clips from 8:22 to 9:05. Amazing clip of the space and all the stars! :)
After Looking So Deep Into The Universe Hubble Still Couldn't Figure Out Where Youtuve Recomendation Come From
I've always thought the universe is just the inside of a enormous creature. And the stars, galaxies, planets and all, are just parts of the inside of its body. I mean it is all alive, right. And we are just tiny cells inside it's body. Were so small we can't see what the huge being really is. Like a ant looking at us. And this creature is just one of many, and it goes on and on, forever.
We're in some creatures penis.
my religion is science... it explains so much, and its not 'maybes, or buts and ifs' but hard facts, we can see there are more galexies in a pinprick of the sky than we ever imagined. Its almost 99.99% sure that there are planets out there that would harbour life in some form. Shame they are so far away that we will never know without some kind of 'warp speed', or 'worm hole' access.
@JosephW99
Well PsyogiBottoms explained why looking farther away is equivalent to looking farther back in time. But for the direction: there is no single location or direction from us at which the big bang occurred. It was an expansion of space, not matter, so in a sense it "happened everywhere". It's like a person living on the surface of a balloon asking where the expansion happens when someone blows it up.
Space-time is churned by rotating bodies How can then space-time has a beginning in the absence of bodies matlab your space-time entangled to singularity of bodies
All I can say is - WOW! Great Job!
Great it ain't. Needs to be edited by informed people, maybe physicists. But the NASA pics are great.
if there was a big bang wouldn't there be a big hole in the middle of the universe after everything left and spread out
I'm no astronomer but the best analogy I've heard is the expanding universe is like rising (bread) dough. If you imagine you are in a particular place in the dough everything is moving (rising) away from you as you see it.
@@SB-oi7qo the only problem with that is you have to keep adding something as in your analogy with yeast and bread it keeps adding carbon dioxide i know it is not creating it but it is producing it and I don't think the stars are adding anything
Thanks Hubble, you little R2-D2 in the sky.
lol its the size of a bus, actually.
Question: If the telescope is orbiting the Earth it means it's moving. So how does it stay on one place for long exposure?
Where would one look to see where in space the big ban happened?
Dang, I cant wait for the Deepest, deep, deep field to come out! nkow what im Saying?
No ragrets.
B
Hubble is also in at least 2 versions pointed downward at Earth for reconnaissance/intelligence reasons.
I think you have Wingdings on for font mister!
Each image of each galaxy is existing in a different time. So if you travel toward one of the galaxies the images would change as if someone was painting a picture of the galaxy each day and sending it towards us. As you travel you would pass the images and they would change , becoming closer to what is going on now(the same now that you exsist in) but the now you are heading towards cannot be seen until you get there.
...and I'll add that the song in this vid was called "Evolution" (nr 3 on the soundtrack).
I question it alot and i love short videos like this to get my brain thinking about what essentially is the most important questions that we can ever ask.
Humanity is so ungreatful on the whole, we are more worried about war, religion and other pointless things... lets focus our resources, intelligence and time to this shit and we would get alot further in developing our knowledge and understanding!
If there were any time in human history we knew for sure we are not in the middle of everything , it is now. This stuff makes me feel so small I cannot even convey it.
Beautiful insight in time and matter. To be part of this feels great!1!1
Gosh i love it up there
It would be crazy if we found out that we were in a computer system or we are a experiment of someone's.
Yes, crazy that God created mankind in his own image and allowed his creation reign over all the creatures of the earth. We are supposed to be the keeper of Gods Creation. Instead we squander it. Abuse it, destroy it and prove to God we are not worthy of his Son's forgiveness of our sins even though Thats exactly what he has done to those that put their faith in Jesus. God's only Son. Born of man, incarnate, being of one with the father Whom died so that we might find salvation through the sacrament of blood and body given through Christ's body to atone for our sins and have life ever lasting.
nothing of this sort i think
AWESOME..but there is more..when James web telescope will be ready??
@O2BSoLucky and as carl sagan said, "we are lucky to live in this time, the first time in human history where we are in fact visiting other worlds."
These pictures of the universe encourage the imagination, as they convey the message of the creator, saying, size can be infinite in proportion, and he understands beauty, whilst we can only appreciate it.
He never seizes to impress us in the mind, on the street, on earth, and even out there in space.
Hope we meet again in good time, till then, we toil in the mud over here, as we prepare our own galaxy.
Praise be to God, the Chief Architect Of Project Good.
@smpaudio assuming everything in this reality is interconnected, can we truly know anything without knowing it all?
@Acrimonator I must concede that a tear in the fabric of space of space-time is impressive :P
OK, so Hubble was launched in 1990? Or is that a wikipedia mistake? I've also seen Hubble 20th anniversary vids so I'm kind of stumped. So it looks like this vid is 5 years old? You should mention that in the description.
Hubble telescope. Whatever what we see through this telescope is an old images/past happening. If an image is a million light years distance, this image what we are seeing through telescope is also a million year old past. Am I correct?
What causes gravity?
Interesting do you think they point that at earth and look deep into the earth
Looking to the End of Time ??? End or Beginning?
4:38 Hubble Ultra Deep Field image on left. Artist's depiction on right.
4:47 artist's simulation of big bang. Plus British accented narrator's summary of big bang theory and postulated dark matter with electro-beat music background. Hence, it must be true.
5:40 the universe's "dark age" looks bright with stars.
Any 12 Billion year old spiral galaxies? By the way, how much time does a spiral galaxy need to form and rotate?
The alternating ACS and NICMOS images were well displayed.
bending and decending
I witnesses The End of Time.
One of the Best Doctor Who episodes.
@smpaudio my point was that i wasnt being literal, which is actually the second tangent in the convo with tenebrous. my 1st point was that science is being thwarted by it's own methodology which tends to ignore anything that it cannot quantify, and secondly by individuals such as yourselves who really think consumer technology is an actual indication of our achievements and a third point which i know will only lead to conjecture. im no flat earther, though hollow planets do sound appealing XD
Cheers. Spot on!
Beautiful
Makes me wonder if the deep field picture is part of the formation they call the great sloan wall.
Fantastic.
cool video... time is relevant and Chuck is a writer
Amazing!!!!!!!
40 billion probable life supporting planets in our galaxy. Considering the trouble 7 billion humans is causing on Earth, I say its time to concentrate humankinds efforts to getting off this rock. In the long run, it is ultimately our only choice.
EVIDENCE?
Open your mind...fool
Yeah, with careful choices we can alter our solar system and live in our own solar system on another planet or two. There are alot of resources here.We may have to move a couple of planets into a nearby orbit but, if done carefully we can live on to the point our technology overrides any care of our demise, like our visiting buddies from space that are studying us for their own use.
As long as it involves humans the problems will be the same so what’s the point?
D J problems would be same if we had too many of any one species on the earth. Most likely we will do something to get a good sized chunk of us killed at some point, and reset things for a while. The earth ends the same no matter what, we get swallowed into a dying star. Humans, zebras, mosquitoes, it all goes. Stop being so hard on a species that has been so good at survival that we have overpopulated ourselves. And if we do find a way to get off this rock, please don’t take the mosquitos to the new place.....
that is true, but, if you base the mathematics on a perpetual steady state with no beginning you find the currents thru observed space would account for apparent motion as well as variation in the background radiation and Doppler. its sort of like looking at a large river. from your view you draw draw all data but the river exists before you and after. though you cant see the rest it can approximated from apparent vectors in the part you observe. except the Universe is 11 dimensional, of course.
Never play with a tiger's balls - God has a sense of humour ;)
10 years ago and tonight I receive this in my recommendation. 😐
my god.. i can look at the hubble ultra deep field for hours...
Desde Colombia. Ojala que también sea en nuestro idioma. ESPAÑOL. Gracias Me fascina la astronomia. Nuevamente gracias.
Truely amazing! :)
To extend our vision, you don't only need a supercrisp mirror, you also have to increase your exposure time- perhaps a glimpse into ourselves is no longer adequate.
Wish I could live forever! Could see what we know in 100 years. 1000 years. What will we accomplish by then?