Horse of a Different Color: Hubble's Universe Unfiltered

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  • Опубликовано: 24 авг 2024
  • The Horsehead Nebula is a striking, dark gas cloud just below Orion's belt. It is a favorite of both professional and amateur astronomers. However, as a dark nebula, most of its true structure is hidden from visible light observations. To celebrate the 23rd anniversary of the Hubble Space Telescope, we revealed the considerable detail of that unseen nebular structure via an infrared portrait. The result is even more striking, and something one just doesn't see very often: a veritable astronomical horse of a different color.
    "Hubble's Universe" is a recurring broadcast from HubbleSite, online home of the Hubble Space Telescope. Astrophysicist Frank Summers takes viewers on an in-depth tour of the latest Hubble discoveries. Find more episodes at hubblesite.org/...
    Horsehead Nebula
    hubblesite.org/...
    Horsehead Nebula in Infrared Light
    hubblesite.org/...

Комментарии • 203

  • @jefforegon2916
    @jefforegon2916 4 года назад +19

    Your excitement while speaking captures my attention, like I can't miss the next minute. You are a most excellent Geek (said with ALL due respect), and you do an excellent job speaking and informing us (average humans) about space and what Hubble finds in a way that makes me want to learn more.

  • @FrankSummers
    @FrankSummers 11 лет назад +12

    Telescopes are designed to detect much, much more than the human eye in sensitivity, resolution, and wavelength range. The human eye view would be pretty fuzzy, very faint, and rather colorless (faint objects are perceived as gray). Even flying to the Horsehead in a spaceship would not help much, as you would be closer to the cloud, but it would be spread out across the sky. The two effects cancel each other, and the brightness would be the same. Only the stars would be brighter.

  • @Gibbeon
    @Gibbeon 7 лет назад +41

    A well done video. I am very pleased to have viewed it, and enjoyed the information as well as the speaker very much. thank you for posting this.

  • @nitsan
    @nitsan 7 лет назад +63

    These videos are excellent. Much better than many TV docs about space.

    • @Terkzorr
      @Terkzorr 3 года назад +5

      Many space documentaries are always so unnecessarily over dramatic and over the top.

    • @SERVCE_F_HpE
      @SERVCE_F_HpE 3 года назад

      ALIENS..... XD

  • @FrankSummers
    @FrankSummers 11 лет назад +11

    I have the complete Hipparcos catalog with 3D positions. As you correctly state, these roughly 100,000 stars are just the brighter ones and cover the whole night sky. With over 40,000 square degrees on the sky, that's an average of 2-3 per square degree. This Hubble image is roughly 10 square arc-minutes, or 1/400th of a square degree. So Hipparcos is not much of a help.

  • @FrankSummers
    @FrankSummers 11 лет назад +8

    Thanks. Wish I had time to produce them more often.

  • @FrankSummers
    @FrankSummers 11 лет назад +55

    Hi. I'm Dr. Frank Summers. I hope you enjoy the episode. Please ask questions and I'll check back periodically to answer them.

    • @andrewsegal4734
      @andrewsegal4734 6 лет назад +1

      Love your videos and enthusiasm, Dr. Summers. I would say that I would find it interesting to know the relative scale of what we are observing. How many light years across -- or Solar systems, or some other measure that provides context -- are the images in the pictures and film? Thanks!

    • @davehallett3128
      @davehallett3128 4 года назад

      Thank you for educating us clearly in such a fantastic subject. You make learning fun

    • @ffraj5104
      @ffraj5104 4 года назад +1

      Dude you are awesome , I wish a teachers were good as you. U seem like a great uncle to have , and to light it up with.

    • @partialtomusic
      @partialtomusic 3 года назад

      The look of barely restrained glee that took over your face when you hit that closing pun made me hate you.
      Enjoying the series; it's great. I know this is late to the party, but thanks to everyone involved for making these and putting them up here.

    • @brownsamurai3070
      @brownsamurai3070 3 года назад

      Thank you for creating this video and your continued work. A question that always bugged me. Are there any imagines of the Horsehead nebula showing the nebula expanding? Or are all imagines taken (since the camera invention) always look the same because not enough time has passed?

  • @eltonparks659
    @eltonparks659 7 лет назад +10

    Incredibly beautiful. So surreal, and mysterious. Total awe.

  • @jondunmore4268
    @jondunmore4268 3 года назад

    6:25 -- when he took the little box and expanded it- and you could see GALAXIES beyond the nebula--- that just blew my mind!

  • @FrankSummers
    @FrankSummers 11 лет назад +2

    Thank you for watching.

    • @jimjorquez9481
      @jimjorquez9481 7 лет назад +1

      You are a wonderful scientist and your presentation superb!

  • @pareshmokani
    @pareshmokani 2 года назад

    Dr. Frank Summers describes just the way our uncle tells us with love and affection. One doesn't need a superstar or a bimbo to attract young minds to astronomy. Dr Summers loves to make it so simple that you don't realise when the episode gets over. It is only when he says Thank you, we know that it is about to get over. Regards

  • @FrankSummers
    @FrankSummers 11 лет назад +4

    The HH nebula is a dark, dense, gas cloud. These clouds form by gravity slowly pulling together the gas and dust between the stars in our galaxy. Such gas is mostly hydrogen and helium (as is most of the universe), with a small smattering of heavier elements like carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, etc.
    We expect Hubble to be usable for several more years. I'm hoping it lasts until its 30th anniversary in 2020.

  • @winterweib
    @winterweib 7 лет назад +38

    Dear Dr. Summer, you are so so AWESOME.

  • @RebeccaNec
    @RebeccaNec 10 лет назад +6

    I'm the kind of person who would watch it over and over Mr.Summers. It is interesting how you see level 5 galaxies in the backround which I mean galaxies billions of light years away when I say level 5. An example of level 5 galaxies would be the Ultra Deep field.(Tim)

    • @winterweib
      @winterweib 7 лет назад +1

      I watch it over and over :) I wished I could store every word in my mind, but the more I hear, the less I know it seems.

    • @jimjorquez9481
      @jimjorquez9481 7 лет назад +1

      Winterweib: I feel the same ,,,but this is actually what all great scientists and thinkers experience. "The more I know the more ignorant I become." Welcome to the club!

  • @huubderksen8466
    @huubderksen8466 9 лет назад +5

    Excellent enthusiast talk, good explanation of how this beautiful small zoom-in the Horse-head nebulae was made!

  • @charlesdjones1
    @charlesdjones1 3 года назад

    Ignore all the RUclips wannabe hacks that read some wiki page 5 mins before recording, Dr. Summers is the real deal.

  • @FrankSummers
    @FrankSummers 11 лет назад +2

    Yes, there are stars between us and the Horsehead Nebula. The HN is about 1500 light-years away, plenty of space for intervening stars. Since the nebula is opaque to visible light, any star atop the dark nebula in a visible light image must be in front of the nebula.

  • @b01tact10n
    @b01tact10n Год назад

    My Favorite of all constellations! I love what orion has to offer. So awesome to see!

  • @whydidyouresign
    @whydidyouresign 5 лет назад

    As a very young child I knew about the horsehead nebula from my copy of The Golden Book of Astronomy. I was transfixed by it then and had wild imaginings of someday flying a spaceship around it and seeing it from all sides, inside and out. Guess that someday is now. At least as close as it gets.
    Your enthusiasm is infectious and makes me regret not following my early passion for astronomy. I ended up majoring in mathematics which was academically my worst subject almost from the start. But still easier than astronomy.
    Thank you for sharing your work through these wonderful presentations. I wish I could have had you as a professor!

  • @mwj5368
    @mwj5368 6 лет назад +8

    Wow, so amazing what you are all doing at NASA. I think astronomy is so exciting all the different means you are creating to observe the solar system and the universe! I really feel that this is a very exciting time of discovery in astronomy! Thanks so much for making this possible for us non-scientists to see and explaining thing so well!

    • @comtns111mts5
      @comtns111mts5 6 лет назад

      Rock on! It is amazing what you can discover on your own with a simple camera these days too, just by pointing it up and clicking away. I highly recommend giving it a try sometime :)

  • @bbanksy1
    @bbanksy1 8 лет назад +8

    Imagine what the night sky would look like if our Solar System was 20 light years away from the Orion and Horse Head Nebula's ...WOW!!

  • @timmidillard3795
    @timmidillard3795 3 года назад

    Who knew? ... Only recently found my way here. I am a budding artist seeking to make somewhat realistic cosmic paintings. And how could you scientists not find the awesome art that I am seeking. My perception expands. This one and the Pillars of Foundation are beyond anything I had imagined. BTW it is so clear once you explain it in artistic terms... You guys rock! (even if I am 7 years late!)

  • @-_Nuke_-
    @-_Nuke_- 6 лет назад

    Honestly Hubble and Nasa need to make many videos like this, explaining what people see in famous space related images. It is ok to back down and explain to people that what they see isn't what they expect. There has to be some kind of CGI involved, some kind of image manipulation involved, some kind of color correction sometimes even done manually by artistic impression, and sometimes what you see is not in the visible spectrum but in some other wavelength that you cannot see.

  • @goldenera7090
    @goldenera7090 11 лет назад +1

    Dr Frank Summers is great at explaining such massively complex things easily understood by layman. thank you Dr

  • @taroman7100
    @taroman7100 6 лет назад +1

    The Horsehead is one of my favorite objects but this peek in is incredible! Thank you I'm an amateur astronomer but with skies deteriorating this arm chair stuff aint too bad. I'm hooked.

  • @TonyMach01
    @TonyMach01 11 лет назад

    It takes (for me as a layman) real work to get to gripes *what* is out there, and *where* it is, and especially what is known, and what isn't. One starts out with the model that everything not on Earth is on "The Heavens", but going from the Solar System, to our stellar neighbourhood, to the milky-way and then to the near galaxies, and off to far away galaxies, there are so many orders of magnitude… "The Heavens" is not a sphere around us, and to grok this vastness is amazing…

  • @chrisbaker2903
    @chrisbaker2903 2 года назад

    I've seen the horsehead nebula through a club's telescope I had checked out. Honestly I was very disappointed in what I could see because it's actually relatively small compared to the Orion Constellation and oriented so the muzzle was pointing up I didn't recognize it for what it was for at least 30 seconds. The way everyone talked about it I expected something huge and breathtaking and what I got was "oh, that's it?" Pretty much turned me off to doing my own deep sky observing and I settled into close stuff like the planets but even those are disappointing after seeing all the pictures in Astronomy and Sky & Telescope. I was excited to see Alpha Centauri when I went on the tour to the southern tip of Baja for the Solar eclipse of 91 because I could see the two separate main stars through my 4 1/4" Meade scope.
    This video gives me a whole new perspective of what there is to see and how inadequate our natural eyes are for seeing most of it. There's another nebula I've heard of and wonder if you've done a video on or maybe are planning one, The Southern Coal Sack. I've only ever heard this one mentioned in science fiction stories and only rarely then. The people in the ship were on the other side of it and seeing all the things it blocks. Obviously fiction but with your techniques we might get a glimpse of what's really there and I'll bet it's not nearly as dark in other wavelengths as it is in visible ones.

  • @inamkhan100
    @inamkhan100 4 года назад

    0:56 there is a galaxy right up the right shoulder of Dr Summer !!! hhhaha Sir you are awesome .

  • @andyascough9738
    @andyascough9738 11 лет назад

    Those pictures are amazing. Such detail despite the incredible distances involved. I think my mouth actually fell open when you revealed the infra red horse head pic. Great work people.

  • @FloozieOne
    @FloozieOne 6 лет назад

    It looks like a great fountain of foam or sort of liquid cotton falling from a font. Heartbreakingly beautiful as are all Hubble's pictures but some are so awesome, (and I mean that in the great classical sense, not the "awesome" of someone's new clothes), they just push you back in your chair with your eyes wide trying to take it all in and your mouth open with astonishment.

  • @corneliusdobeneck4081
    @corneliusdobeneck4081 8 лет назад +7

    This is so incredebly beautiful.
    Thanks a lot for doing what you do! :D

  • @FrankSummers
    @FrankSummers 11 лет назад +2

    Cosmological redshift only applies to galaxies, not stars. The expansion of the universe stretches the space between galaxies. The galaxies themselves are gravitationally collapsed objects and are governed by their own self-gravity. Hence, the stars in our galaxy show doppler shift due to motion, but not cosmological redshift due to expansion.

  • @gabbynewneo
    @gabbynewneo 11 лет назад +4

    This show is amazing!! I'm learning so much with every video. Thank you!

  • @Leafisa
    @Leafisa 11 лет назад

    The horse head nebula is my Fav object in the night sky. Thank Dr Frank for showing us such wonderful images

  • @joep1551
    @joep1551 5 лет назад +1

    Spectacular! Wow, wow, WOW!! I have no idea, how it took me over a year, to find you.

  • @angelbarbosa7835
    @angelbarbosa7835 7 лет назад

    great job with the horses head nebula

  • @MountainFisher
    @MountainFisher Год назад

    My astronomy club has a 16 inch Mead Schmitt-Cassegrain telescope, SCT, we can see the Horsehead and they use a Hydrogen Beta filter. For the HH even in visible light it is awesome to see it with your own eyes. I cannot see it at all with my personal scope, it is only 6 inches and even with the proper filters it just doesn't gather enough light for visual. With long exposure photography I could take a picture, but I'm not into astro-photography except simple non-long exposure pictures.

  • @135barbara
    @135barbara 11 лет назад +1

    Thank you so much for the videos ! Wonderful pictures, and good information. Your enthusiasm for the subject is evident.

  • @charjl96
    @charjl96 5 лет назад

    It looks like a sad horse wandering off into the distance.
    It also looks like a distressed ghoul with hollow eyes, bony hands and flowing rags for a garment.
    It's leaning forward with its right hand on the side of its head.

  • @nadiamunday8351
    @nadiamunday8351 4 года назад +2

    awesome! Thank you a zillion time for this amazing work
    More more ❤️

  • @yaronkl
    @yaronkl 4 года назад +1

    Fascinating. And so well made. I love these videos. Thank you.

  • @joerive2048
    @joerive2048 5 лет назад +1

    Just wow! Thank you so much for putting this up; it's so fascinating!

  • @shayg76-n2t
    @shayg76-n2t 11 лет назад +1

    Dr Frank Summers your the best !!
    Keep on with this great work

  • @GamerDave1974
    @GamerDave1974 10 лет назад +2

    Dude, Starting at 05:09 would make one cool ass screensaver!!!!!

  • @rotzfrosch0970
    @rotzfrosch0970 3 года назад

    It's amazing. I'm speechless and that's not often happened. Great! Our universe is overwhelming.

  • @georgeflutey838
    @georgeflutey838 2 года назад

    Excellent video, Is actually mind blowing. Thanks a million - light years!

  • @eck3506
    @eck3506 3 года назад

    Such incredible beauty and an excellent presentation.

  • @DamnImSoBored123
    @DamnImSoBored123 11 лет назад +1

    this man is so awesome! mr. Frank Summers :)

  • @capturethephotons2078
    @capturethephotons2078 4 года назад

    That's awesome how they layer them in order like that to create that effect

  • @Maevelikeschampagne
    @Maevelikeschampagne 4 года назад

    Sucked in like light to a black hole. Love it.

  • @lhaastdaiz
    @lhaastdaiz 11 лет назад +1

    Nice work guys! It's a beautiful image. I'm looking forward to pictures from the JWST!

  • @kennethflorek8532
    @kennethflorek8532 11 лет назад

    That infrared photo of the whole region does look like stuff randomly drifting and forming into strands, but in that one dramatic section, where the horsehead is, it looks like something being driven, like an eruption, or two explosions intersecting.

  • @Devsterinator
    @Devsterinator 7 лет назад +1

    This is so wonderful to watch!

  • @wendydelk1524
    @wendydelk1524 5 лет назад

    Absolutely astonishing visually

  • @KarlosRaver
    @KarlosRaver 11 лет назад +2

    That was amazing, great work

  • @TonyMach01
    @TonyMach01 11 лет назад

    The other thing is that one starts out thinking that sooooo much is known (and it is!). But there is still soooo much to learn! E.g. one would naively assume (as I did) that for every star we can observe telescopically, and for which we have determined the position and spectral-type and what-not, that the distance is known with equal precision. There is still so much to survey, whether it is stars (and exoplanets!), or asteroids, or galaxies, or KBOs.
    And don't mention the Oort's cloud!.

  •  11 лет назад

    Thank you Mr Frank Summers!

  • @rsyphiladelphia6720
    @rsyphiladelphia6720 10 лет назад

    very good programme thanks

  • @amrikjohal3926
    @amrikjohal3926 10 лет назад

    This was very knowable video.

  • @liamhackett513
    @liamhackett513 6 лет назад

    love the talks Dr Summer

  • @BboyAcademy
    @BboyAcademy 3 года назад

    I wish I had been an Astronomer. Thank you for these. I shared the heck out of 3 of you vids already. in a couple groups.

  • @communist-hippie
    @communist-hippie 11 лет назад

    really really love this show, hope you never quit :)

  • @wwjudasdo
    @wwjudasdo 11 лет назад

    Dr.Summers how was the HH nebula formed? What is it made of exactly? How much longer will Hubble be usable?

  • @CalebclarkNet
    @CalebclarkNet 10 лет назад

    Very nice! Thanks

  • @Xostrich12X
    @Xostrich12X 11 лет назад

    i love these episodes

  • @redzool
    @redzool 7 лет назад

    It seems to me that futuristic spaceships would need the ability to see such things to avoid danger, assuming the invisible light you see is dangerous, as for infrared mode I assume the clouds to be dangerous too

  • @abuamalahmed3
    @abuamalahmed3 8 лет назад

    This all reports and massages are very important for physics students. thank you,

  • @Dyslexic-Artist-Theory-on-Time
    @Dyslexic-Artist-Theory-on-Time 11 лет назад

    First rate astronomy video with beautiful images!

  • @massimoamerica6726
    @massimoamerica6726 7 лет назад +1

    this channel is awesome

  • @sarahepearce
    @sarahepearce 10 лет назад +1

    Great video!

  • @jryde421
    @jryde421 10 лет назад

    are senses, are environment...and so on.
    technology: quantum computers uses atoms to make multiple processes all at the same time(i can go deeper into detail if you dont know how computers and quantum computers work) but in the research of quantum computers, shows that atoms can think
    TO SUM EVERY THING UP: since atoms can think and we can think and be aware, all of the energy out there in the infinite universe+all of the extra dimensions of m-theory and the unknown can also think and be aware

  • @leeabe3932
    @leeabe3932 3 года назад

    I see now there are a lot of assumptions built into the depth perception of what you see through the telescopes. I was wondering how depth perception was known and see now it is a lot of guess work, such as the way you put together the 3d video of the nebula.

  • @Stereo3DProductions
    @Stereo3DProductions 10 лет назад

    Yes to Stereo 3D! :) Going to look forward to that!

  • @tomgarrett9708
    @tomgarrett9708 9 лет назад

    VERY INTERESTING

  • @rogerspinks3142
    @rogerspinks3142 3 года назад

    Great show loved it. I am inerested in astronomy I have an HA filter when will I be able to get an infered filter for my telescope so I can view in 3 differentl light forms?

  • @larrybailey7437
    @larrybailey7437 3 года назад

    Love this science stuff.

  • @cruzsanchez3647
    @cruzsanchez3647 4 года назад

    hi Frank, i was looking at the horsehead nebula and what it looks more to me is a headless woman walking swinging her arms more than a horsehead .

    • @cruzsanchez3647
      @cruzsanchez3647 4 года назад

      go to about the 10:38 time stamp thats when you get a better view

  • @dziis6s
    @dziis6s 11 лет назад +1

    thanks!:)

  • @daniellealmeida7789
    @daniellealmeida7789 4 года назад

    I'm just amazed!

  • @lamdang6876
    @lamdang6876 7 лет назад

    Very good and cool

  • @soldtobediers
    @soldtobediers 4 года назад

    Looks to me like the initial rush of uncorked champagne.

  • @TonyMach01
    @TonyMach01 11 лет назад

    Oh, I just looked it up, Hipparcos hasn't catalogued that many stars… And even the Tycho-2 catalogue only contains stars to 11th magnitude (the stars here are probably much fainter, right?).
    We will have to wait for the Gaia spacecraft, I guess…

  • @TonyMach01
    @TonyMach01 11 лет назад

    I wonder for how many stars in that image there is information from the Hipparcos satellite? I guess it would be a lot of work to incorporate that, and in times of sequestration there aren't probably the resources - but wouldn't that be cool?
    One thing I was wondering while watching: In the animation there are stars in front of the horse head - is this actually the case?

  • @hodge1970ify
    @hodge1970ify 10 лет назад +2

    Id like to have a poster !

  • @damienkobain2989
    @damienkobain2989 7 лет назад

    wow, fantastic 3D model!

  • @justgonnastay
    @justgonnastay 4 года назад

    How fast would you estimate one would be traveling to get that moving view in real time?

  • @MyLinkedinPowerForum
    @MyLinkedinPowerForum 5 лет назад

    WOW! Thank you!

  • @Stellaluna88
    @Stellaluna88 8 лет назад +1

    Was anyone else freaked out at first with the old Horsehead Nebula photo?

    • @lars38010
      @lars38010 7 лет назад +2

      Not really. Our universe is 80% darkness.

    • @b4iwasborn19
      @b4iwasborn19 7 лет назад

      Stella Luna looks more like a lockness head

  • @betoen
    @betoen 7 лет назад

    I still want to see a true color photography. I know all images that NASA show to the public are composite images or computer color enhanced pictures. I really want to see a pictures as it comes from the telescope.

    • @comtns111mts5
      @comtns111mts5 6 лет назад

      They are black and white out of the telescope. They are given different colors so we can learn more about the structures since in visible light, we are pretty limited on what we can learn. The Eagle Nebula Hubble image is very green, and the green relates to hydrogen alpha light (long wavelength red near IR). When we view the image we can determine that all the green casts in the image are from hydrogen gas clouds vs other gasses such as oxygen and sulfur. If you looked at this in the visible it would look red/pink. Same with the Horsehead. In general the original out of camera images are not super exciting until you stack lots of images to reduce the noise and start stretching the images to reveal the details. These RAW images basically look black with a few white blobs which are stars that over-saturated the pixels. The magic happens once you stretch. Cheers.

  •  8 лет назад +2

    wow! the Horsehead nebula is amazing! ! I want to see It but I have got only 70 mm telescope :(( so I want 10 inch telescope, but I haven't got money for It :(((

    • @winterweib
      @winterweib 7 лет назад +1

      This is indeed so sad! But, you know, sometimes I wrote how I learned all about the sky from my dear late Mother, how we enjoyed watching sky at night- and we had no telescope, and since we lived in a huge city, a telescope would not have shown us anything.
      What would we have enjoyed internet! We could not even dream of it, nobody imagined it would exist one day: I grew up many years ago, I was a six since a few days when the moon got its first visit.
      We always searched for new books about stars in all libraries for me mother, bought her the books of Carl Sagan, and that was all we had. You have internte, youtube, and these brilliant videos with the incredible explanations by Dr Summers. It is hard you have not a real good telescope, I really know what you feel- but at least you have these videos here.
      I HOPE you will be able one day to have a good telescope! (I hope I will have one, too :) )
      All my very best wishes and greetings!

    •  7 лет назад +1

      +winterweib Now, I have got 12" telescope... I saw it little bit

    • @winterweib
      @winterweib 7 лет назад +4

      Oh WOW! I am so happy for you! This is very very great, dearest Space Hunter! I may sound lame, (if so, I am sorry), but I am really excited and can only try to imagine what miracles and how many wonders you now may be able to see. It is a wonder only to see the real Jupiter or so- and now you can see THIS! It makes me very abuzz. Congrats!

  • @primemagi
    @primemagi 10 лет назад

    thank you.
    astronomers should watch the mouth of hoarse head nebula

  • @tomjensen618
    @tomjensen618 3 года назад

    Hi Frank. Why do some stars have those 4 rays coming out at 90 degrees to each other? I once had a spectacular mind absolute elsewhere experience where I became space for a few seconds and out there in space, I saw that same effect on stars.

  • @commendatore2516
    @commendatore2516 2 года назад

    i have read somewhere that all the pictures that the Hubble made were coloured in by people, so is this true? and if they did so, does it mean that all those objects photographed by the Hubble are colourless?

  • @wwjudasdo
    @wwjudasdo 11 лет назад

    What produced the gas in the nebula?

  • @melvinrodriguez9989
    @melvinrodriguez9989 4 года назад

    Videos Muy Buenos.Deleite Para La Vista.Super.

  • @maritzaolimpia9888
    @maritzaolimpia9888 5 лет назад

    Maravilloso

  • @vincent21212
    @vincent21212 3 года назад

    how many AUs in length is that horsehead approx?

  • @irlalai9096
    @irlalai9096 11 лет назад +1

    Omg it's awesome:O!!!!

  • @alexgodoy181
    @alexgodoy181 9 лет назад +1

    Qué increíble la tecnología el poder ver el espacio inmenso desde el celular

  • @johnpinos1471
    @johnpinos1471 9 лет назад

    WOW....superb