I think I speak for many when I say I’m always excited to see another video up and drop whatever else I’m doing if possible to get lost in this fascinating content. Good for my mental health too, it’s like a little escape from my own world for a while. Thank you!
John, your work has gotten me through many a tough night. Getting lost in thinking about existential threats, cryo-volcanoes, alien worlds or invasions.. it all has an ameliorating effect on my psyche, somehow. Thank you.
Thanks for noticing. It's intentional and a homage to those days. Some people get it, some don't, but I grew up on radio and am using their delivery techniques to bring the style up into modern times on youtube, but you'll hear tones of 1930's Orson Welles right up through Art Bell and Coast on both channels.
@@JohnMichaelGodier radio was definitely an inferior technology but it had qualities that are hard to recreate digitally! (Maybe it's the nostalgia) Your channel is keeping that old fashioned story telling aspect alive! (Welles is a little before my time but I used to stay up all night just to listen to art bell and George Norrie when I was a younger man! Coast to Coast didn't come on until midnight on the local am channel!)
Hi John!! I am a big fan of your channel!! I have two questions. 1) Are you going to cover the story about the radio bursts that has been seen to repeat every 18 minutes? 2) Do you have any plans to start offering your amazing content in 4K resolution? Like I said I am a huge fan of your channel and please keep up the great work!!
I've been going through a lot of personal problems of late and your videos have given me something else to concentrate on and get to sleep at night. Thanks so much for what you do, and looking forward to see what's to come.
I remember a couple years ago a story that someone had spotted some thermal anomalies in Hellas basin. They believed they might have been steam vents that were froze into ice tubes. I looked for the story again and could not find it, maybe it turned out to be bogus.
Out of all the potential candidates for life in the solar system, I never would have expected a scientist to say Io was one of them. Congratulations you are the first person to surprise me in a long time LMFAO
Literally was thinking about IO in my science class the other day I really wanted to share my fascination but I felt like I didn’t have a refresher Thank You so much!
This is going to be a great topic. I hope we get to study Io some day, aside from the geology, I think it's a good candidate to find life. It's got extremely hot zone but also cold which means temperate in between and a ridiculous amount of chemical interaction.
I very much appreciate the way your mind operates and executes. How you use the known laws of the perceivable universe and how your imagination wanders within its confines without being governed solely by those laws is truly impressive. Thank you for how you think and how you express those thoughts. It’s beyond art, my friend.
Proximity to ongoing volcanic activity on Mars, with prudent precautions would be a vastly positive circumstance. Rising magma interacting with groundwater over geologic timescales have provided some of the richest metal and mineral deposits on earth. Free heat on Mars is perhaps the most valuable natural resource on offer there especially in the early stages of colonization. Nice acidic steam would also be a hugely valuable source of water, process heat and industrial feedstocks like sulfuric and other acids, fluid brines would literally be worth their weight in gold. Finding an active but sleepy geothermal field on Mars would be the local equivalent of Saudi Arabia.
Thank you soo much for all you do. Since my hernia operation you gave me the healing i needed 🤗 i had a good recovery and beeing able to listen to your vids was making it a lot easier. Thank you.
If you live in Seattle, the only volcano to worry about is Mt. Rainer. There is evidence that a lahar reached Kent Wa from Mt. Rainer, but Rainer is the only volcano in WA to have done so. Ash is another story as it could disrupt Seattle's activity immensely IF the wind were to blow from the SE to NW, which is very unusual in that area. Water lines, power lines, oil pipelines, sewer pipes could all be inoperable if a lahar made it to Kent, which would significantly affect people living in Seattle. Again, it is doubtful that ash would ever reach Seattle if Mt Rainier's volcano became active. The wind rarely blows in that direction.
I actually live in Tacoma Washington (I was born here and my father's family has nearly 200 years of family history in the area), and I know "The Mountain" (Mt Rainier) quite well. We call Rainier "The Mountain" because out of every mountain in Washington state, at over 14,000 feet high, it is the one that dominates the landscape more than any other. There is a saying we use - "Live like The Mountain is out.". On clear and sunny days, you can see Mt. Rainier very distinctly throughout most of the Puget Sound region. We refer to this as "The Mountain is out." ie visible. But if it's cloudy, let alone foggy, raining, or snowing, you cannot see Rainier at all, let alone the Cascade mountain range around it. So to "Live like The Mountain is out" means to live as if the skies are clear and the sun is shining regardless of what the weather is actually doing. On a more abstract or metaphorical level, it means to live your life with joy and grace in spite of the hardships we face - don't let the bad things get you down. As a lifetime resident of the area (and since I was born in 1974), I was here in Tacoma when Mt St Helen's blew out her northern slope in May of 1980. At that time, the eruption and ash-fall was unprecedented and quite shocking to locals, seismologists, and vulcanologists alike. Since then we have learned a lot more about volcanoes and seismic events thanks to more intensive study around the planet. But here, that day still haunts the memories of the locals who were here when "The Keeper of the Fire" (St Helen's nickname because of the type of volcano she is, which never spews lava, only ash and rock) quite literally exploded before our eyes. Just the shear diversity of volcano types on Earth is mind-blowing, let alone throughout the expanse of our solar system. Imagine the extreme of that diversity throughout the Milky Way Galaxy alone, never mind throughout the Universe, with some types of volcanoes being beyond human imagination!
Beautiful post. I made a point of mentioning Mt. Rainier because it's dangerous, but also from personal experience. I saw Mt. St. Helens erupt in 1980 from Portland as a 5 year old. It imprinted on me to this day how astonishingly powerful a volcanic eruption can be, and its secondary effects of melting ice just as bad or even worse. Imagine what's out there as far as volcanism. Thanks and be well.
@@JohnMichaelGodier Yeah, same here. That, along with my interest in Dinosaurs at age 4, got me interested in Plate Tectonics, Seismology, Geology, and Vulcanism when I was 5/6 years old ("How did the planet go from one huge continent to 7?" plus "Holy Crap Volcano Exploding!"). Just a few of the over 2dozen science subjects I've studied and researched in my life outside of school. LOL
Seattle isn't in danger from Mt. Rainier. But cities south of Seattle could be. Rainier's eruptions -- if you will -- consist of oozing lava that placidly rolls downhill until it reaches or even crosses Puget Sound. Such an eruption happened several thousand years ago, and wiped out not only whatever was on the downhill slope but all of Puget Sound south of Rainier's longitude. Before then, the sound was far longer, maybe twice as long, north to south, as it is now. -- On the other hand, Rainier's future behavior isn't set in stone (sorry). Part of its crater along its north or northwest rim could collapse, so that the lava that was expelled might be able to hit Seattle, or, at lest, its southern reaches.
It's not so much the lava the USGS is worried about, it's melting that enormous glacial cap and the potential for lahars. I think the current estimate is about 300,000 in danger right now.
There is a model on SketchFab by John Davies called “Mars Terrain Model”. All of the vertical surface features are increased by 20x. It gives an incredible view of the surface features and shape of mars which are otherwise kind of difficult to differentiate from each other. It also makes more easily visible, the deeper surface sections where settled water ended up as matter sorted itself by mass into oceans, I’m assuming, it just “looks” like it. I don’t know the slightest thing about planetary geology, but just looking at it from a perspective of “something hits here, stuff bounces that way” I couldn’t help but notice the Hellas impact crater and Olympus Mons(and the Tharsis Mons) are on the almost exact opposite side of the impact. If you look at the deformed overall shape of mars and Valles Marineris, it looks eerily similar to what happens when a bullet goes through a watermelon in slow motion. (Yes I googled all these features to title them for readers, no I didn’t know them other than Olympus Mons until five minutes ago) It looks like mars was nearly ripped apart by an unimaginable impact like a bullet and watermelon, the force of which almost made it entirely through it and shoved the volcanoes and canyon out the other side. If this pondering is anywhere near accurate, it makes it pretty easy to assume any and everything on the surface was put into orbit around the sun. If so, this impact may have created volcanism at a different time than would have occurred naturally. I’m just thinking out loud here. If anybody has any material/studies suggesting such an occurrence I’d love to look into it if you have any leads. Anybody interested in sharing info for fun, check out that model and let’s let each other know what we think about it and maybe make some more sense of the timelines. If anything, I guarantee it’s worth it to just look at the model regardless.
When you consider what eventually halted the Soviet Kola Superdeep Borehole Project on Earth, it makes me wonder how deep we could drill on the Moon, or Mars. Jules Verne's _Journey to the Center of the Earth_ was found to be conceptually ridiculous, on Earth, but is it much less ridiculous on less geologically active worlds?
I have a hypothesis for Dark Matter... what if it's all cloaked Von Neumann probes? That's why we can detect their gravitational interactions, but not directly, and that's is why dark matter seems clumped around most galaxies? And for the galaxies that seem to not have dark matter, well the probes just hadn't gotten there yet?
Apparently, there's not enough hydrogen and helium in the universe for that to be the case. See for instance: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dark_matter#Composition skip to "baryonic matter"
Not yet Jay, but just wait, the first will be free here on youtube in the form of The Salvagers. But there does exist an informal excerpt from Supermind that I did. It doesn't have all of the fancy audio editing and such, just me talking, but here it is: ruclips.net/video/mZRmOCyPwrM/видео.html
Hi. Amazing videos here. Query: do you think NASA has self distruct devices on the Voyager probes and at the end of their power limit life it will destroy them just in case to avoid detection?
Why are the craters on the moon so shallow? youd think a massive asteroid would leave a crated miles deep, but nothing on the moon is more than a couple hundred feet? Doesn't make sense.
I wonder what it would look like if Olympus Mons erupted. I'm pretty sure that it's extinct now, but I do wonder what it would have been like when it was active
Could it be that the moon is being knee des by earth's gravity and the area that's recently volcanic was the most sensitive area so it erupted while other areas didn't.
Crater formation in slow motion. Impact Simulation. ruclips.net/video/sOs9kMpc3kY/видео.html Scott Manley got a good video about it too. Why Are Most Impact Craters Perfectly Circular? (Rather than Ovals) ruclips.net/video/BCGWGJOUjHY/видео.html
Good observation, but bad assumption about what causes it. It isn't that objects never come in at an angle -- all of the impacting objects come in from angles. So what you really want to ask is this: what causes the roundness of the craters even though every crater is caused by objects approaching the moon from wildly different angles? Then you crack open a physics textbook and figure it out.
I need your help John. I just heard from Anton that lacking gravity is doing us potential long term damage at the mitochondrial level. I need some good news because this makes space travel much more expensive. We'll have to use rotation for gravity for longer distances, and it's just a mess. Do you have an affordable solution?
I think I speak for many when I say I’m always excited to see another video up and drop whatever else I’m doing if possible to get lost in this fascinating content. Good for my mental health too, it’s like a little escape from my own world for a while. Thank you!
This guy 100%
Preach 🔥🙌
3.9k people agreed so far first hour so you are in good company in that regard
You do. Gotta get that JMG playing immediately when I see it.
Definitely not speaking for me. Speak for yourself champ.
John, your work has gotten me through many a tough night. Getting lost in thinking about existential threats, cryo-volcanoes, alien worlds or invasions.. it all has an ameliorating effect on my psyche, somehow. Thank you.
^this
Whatever “big drama” my life has… it is dissolved into nothing in the vastness of the Universe
You are not the only one.
He's a bot. Pretty good though, right?
@@Audfile ur a comment bot
One of the best narrators in the game
This dudes voice is such a throwback to the radio days. He always gives me heavy "Coast to Coast AM" vibes!
Thanks for noticing. It's intentional and a homage to those days. Some people get it, some don't, but I grew up on radio and am using their delivery techniques to bring the style up into modern times on youtube, but you'll hear tones of 1930's Orson Welles right up through Art Bell and Coast on both channels.
@@JohnMichaelGodier radio was definitely an inferior technology but it had qualities that are hard to recreate digitally! (Maybe it's the nostalgia) Your channel is keeping that old fashioned story telling aspect alive! (Welles is a little before my time but I used to stay up all night just to listen to art bell and George Norrie when I was a younger man! Coast to Coast didn't come on until midnight on the local am channel!)
Hi John!! I am a big fan of your channel!! I have two questions. 1) Are you going to cover the story about the radio bursts that has been seen to repeat every 18 minutes? 2) Do you have any plans to start offering your amazing content in 4K resolution? Like I said I am a huge fan of your channel and please keep up the great work!!
Best part of the week is when your videos come out...Great work
I've been going through a lot of personal problems of late and your videos have given me something else to concentrate on and get to sleep at night. Thanks so much for what you do, and looking forward to see what's to come.
You are most welcome, and I wish you better days ahead.
Thank you John for going all that way to Mars to get us videos of Martian volcanos.
I got back last Tuesday.
@@JohnMichaelGodier whats the covid travel restrictions like ?
@@JohnMichaelGodier if only you'd be kind enough to lend nasa the lightspeed engine that took you there
@@JohnMichaelGodier I hope your arms aren't tired from all pf that flying bud!
Great video John!
I remember a couple years ago a story that someone had spotted some thermal anomalies in Hellas basin. They believed they might have been steam vents that were froze into ice tubes. I looked for the story again and could not find it, maybe it turned out to be bogus.
JMG is the real deal. Gonna blast this one while I sleep tonight 🔥🙌
The fact that Volcanism can actually transfer different planets materials to their neighbour(s) is awesome😵💫
Certified original comment all others are stolen.
like a sneeze
It’s like when you pop a pimple and the puss flies out and hits someone else
Yep one version of panspermia
This channel deserves more like buttons 😊
The king is back
Thank you for this!
John’s voice is pure ASMR
This is absolutely one of the single greatest channels on RUclips
Out of all the potential candidates for life in the solar system, I never would have expected a scientist to say Io was one of them. Congratulations you are the first person to surprise me in a long time LMFAO
Awesome way to kickstart the week, much obliged JMG 😀
I always look forward to hearing the smooth voice of John, this was a nice way to start my day.
Another excellent video. Well done, and thanks!
Thanks for you being you
John is American Legend and a hero
Literally was thinking about IO in my science class the other day I really wanted to share my fascination but I felt like I didn’t have a refresher Thank You so much!
Thanks for another great video. Also, I can't help but read the video titles out-loud in your iconic voice 😆
Please keep up the good work.
This is going to be a great topic. I hope we get to study Io some day, aside from the geology, I think it's a good candidate to find life. It's got extremely hot zone but also cold which means temperate in between and a ridiculous amount of chemical interaction.
I very much appreciate the way your mind operates and executes. How you use the known laws of the perceivable universe and how your imagination wanders within its confines without being governed solely by those laws is truly impressive.
Thank you for how you think and how you express those thoughts. It’s beyond art, my friend.
Proximity to ongoing volcanic activity on Mars, with prudent precautions would be a vastly positive circumstance. Rising magma interacting with groundwater over geologic timescales have provided some of the richest metal and mineral deposits on earth. Free heat on Mars is perhaps the most valuable natural resource on offer there especially in the early stages of colonization.
Nice acidic steam would also be a hugely valuable source of water, process heat and industrial feedstocks like sulfuric and other acids, fluid brines would literally be worth their weight in gold. Finding an active but sleepy geothermal field on Mars would be the local equivalent of Saudi Arabia.
I'm a stupid grunt but reality in itself at times can shock the soul. It's all so astonishing.
Always great to see a new upload. Keep up the great work 🍃
When I first read of iron magma I thought this is the most metal thing ever.
Damn it John I need to go to sleep. This and event horizon? Not enough hours in the day....
Thank you soo much for all you do. Since my hernia operation you gave me the healing i needed 🤗 i had a good recovery and beeing able to listen to your vids was making it a lot easier. Thank you.
Yikes, and best wishes and speedy recovery.
@@JohnMichaelGodier thank you, im fine again, had a good recovery.
I can't wait for the JWST to start sending us some incredible data.
JMG upload :)
Fantastic, JMG! Thanks a lot for the video! 😃
Stay safe there with your family! 🖖😊
John Michael Godi-day is always a good day.
If you live in Seattle, the only volcano to worry about is Mt. Rainer. There is evidence that a lahar reached Kent Wa from Mt. Rainer, but Rainer is the only volcano in WA to have done so. Ash is another story as it could disrupt Seattle's activity immensely IF the wind were to blow from the SE to NW, which is very unusual in that area. Water lines, power lines, oil pipelines, sewer pipes could all be inoperable if a lahar made it to Kent, which would significantly affect people living in Seattle. Again, it is doubtful that ash would ever reach Seattle if Mt Rainier's volcano became active. The wind rarely blows in that direction.
The fact that Volcanism can actually transfer different planets materials to their neighbour(s) is awesome
Fascinating video, thank you John. Would love more videos on this subject.
RUclips's best channel.
I started reading your book. I love it so far!
Is Carbon 12 to carbon 13 isotope ratio in the Martian soil a biosignature? I'd be interested in a JMG video about that
I actually live in Tacoma Washington (I was born here and my father's family has nearly 200 years of family history in the area), and I know "The Mountain" (Mt Rainier) quite well. We call Rainier "The Mountain" because out of every mountain in Washington state, at over 14,000 feet high, it is the one that dominates the landscape more than any other. There is a saying we use - "Live like The Mountain is out.". On clear and sunny days, you can see Mt. Rainier very distinctly throughout most of the Puget Sound region. We refer to this as "The Mountain is out." ie visible. But if it's cloudy, let alone foggy, raining, or snowing, you cannot see Rainier at all, let alone the Cascade mountain range around it. So to "Live like The Mountain is out" means to live as if the skies are clear and the sun is shining regardless of what the weather is actually doing. On a more abstract or metaphorical level, it means to live your life with joy and grace in spite of the hardships we face - don't let the bad things get you down.
As a lifetime resident of the area (and since I was born in 1974), I was here in Tacoma when Mt St Helen's blew out her northern slope in May of 1980. At that time, the eruption and ash-fall was unprecedented and quite shocking to locals, seismologists, and vulcanologists alike. Since then we have learned a lot more about volcanoes and seismic events thanks to more intensive study around the planet. But here, that day still haunts the memories of the locals who were here when "The Keeper of the Fire" (St Helen's nickname because of the type of volcano she is, which never spews lava, only ash and rock) quite literally exploded before our eyes.
Just the shear diversity of volcano types on Earth is mind-blowing, let alone throughout the expanse of our solar system. Imagine the extreme of that diversity throughout the Milky Way Galaxy alone, never mind throughout the Universe, with some types of volcanoes being beyond human imagination!
Beautiful post. I made a point of mentioning Mt. Rainier because it's dangerous, but also from personal experience. I saw Mt. St. Helens erupt in 1980 from Portland as a 5 year old. It imprinted on me to this day how astonishingly powerful a volcanic eruption can be, and its secondary effects of melting ice just as bad or even worse. Imagine what's out there as far as volcanism. Thanks and be well.
@@JohnMichaelGodier Yeah, same here. That, along with my interest in Dinosaurs at age 4, got me interested in Plate Tectonics, Seismology, Geology, and Vulcanism when I was 5/6 years old ("How did the planet go from one huge continent to 7?" plus "Holy Crap Volcano Exploding!").
Just a few of the over 2dozen science subjects I've studied and researched in my life outside of school. LOL
Iron Lava
🤔🤔🤔
Very interesting 👍
Your work rate is on fire 🔥
Seattle isn't in danger from Mt. Rainier. But cities south of Seattle could be. Rainier's eruptions -- if you will -- consist of oozing lava that placidly rolls downhill until it reaches or even crosses Puget Sound. Such an eruption happened several thousand years ago, and wiped out not only whatever was on the downhill slope but all of Puget Sound south of Rainier's longitude. Before then, the sound was far longer, maybe twice as long, north to south, as it is now. -- On the other hand, Rainier's future behavior isn't set in stone (sorry). Part of its crater along its north or northwest rim could collapse, so that the lava that was expelled might be able to hit Seattle, or, at lest, its southern reaches.
It's not so much the lava the USGS is worried about, it's melting that enormous glacial cap and the potential for lahars. I think the current estimate is about 300,000 in danger right now.
My favourite channel.
Fascinating
There is a model on SketchFab by John Davies called “Mars Terrain Model”. All of the vertical surface features are increased by 20x. It gives an incredible view of the surface features and shape of mars which are otherwise kind of difficult to differentiate from each other. It also makes more easily visible, the deeper surface sections where settled water ended up as matter sorted itself by mass into oceans, I’m assuming, it just “looks” like it. I don’t know the slightest thing about planetary geology, but just looking at it from a perspective of “something hits here, stuff bounces that way” I couldn’t help but notice the Hellas impact crater and Olympus Mons(and the Tharsis Mons) are on the almost exact opposite side of the impact. If you look at the deformed overall shape of mars and Valles Marineris, it looks eerily similar to what happens when a bullet goes through a watermelon in slow motion. (Yes I googled all these features to title them for readers, no I didn’t know them other than Olympus Mons until five minutes ago) It looks like mars was nearly ripped apart by an unimaginable impact like a bullet and watermelon, the force of which almost made it entirely through it and shoved the volcanoes and canyon out the other side. If this pondering is anywhere near accurate, it makes it pretty easy to assume any and everything on the surface was put into orbit around the sun. If so, this impact may have created volcanism at a different time than would have occurred naturally. I’m just thinking out loud here. If anybody has any material/studies suggesting such an occurrence I’d love to look into it if you have any leads. Anybody interested in sharing info for fun, check out that model and let’s let each other know what we think about it and maybe make some more sense of the timelines. If anything, I guarantee it’s worth it to just look at the model regardless.
Asteroid volcanism is crazy. Thank you, sir
I am so happy that our founding fathers had NordVPM
Hurray!
**looks at the yellow planet**
_"The moon is made of cheese, Gromit."_
Keep ‘em comin’ JMG 🔥💪
When you consider what eventually halted the Soviet Kola Superdeep Borehole Project on Earth, it makes me wonder how deep we could drill on the Moon, or Mars. Jules Verne's _Journey to the Center of the Earth_ was found to be conceptually ridiculous, on Earth, but is it much less ridiculous on less geologically active worlds?
You'd still have crushing pressure, but yeah, exciting to see how much deeper we could mine/build/live
I like that ending "livvvve". 👍
How cool and unsettling would it be if that Psyche asteroid turns out to be covered in tool marks/evidence of mining activity!?
It would be wicked!
The fact that volcanism exists on moons that are smaller than Luna is incredible!
Extinct? Wasn't there a huge eruption a few years ago? There's pictures of smoke and dust coming up into the atmosphere.
5:48
That's unless you count geysers as a type of volcano.
John is it possible for you to get Brian Cox on Event Horizon? Your two unique voices on an episode would be epic.
I miss Oumuamua :(
Great stuff as usual!
Never disappoints. 👍
I have a hypothesis for Dark Matter... what if it's all cloaked Von Neumann probes? That's why we can detect their gravitational interactions, but not directly, and that's is why dark matter seems clumped around most galaxies? And for the galaxies that seem to not have dark matter, well the probes just hadn't gotten there yet?
That would take an awful lot of Von Neumann probes!
Would be kinda strange that these probes weigh more than all matter in the universe, though. Sounds like a stretch.
Apparently, there's not enough hydrogen and helium in the universe for that to be the case. See for instance:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dark_matter#Composition
skip to "baryonic matter"
I was feeling depressed then I saw jmg two hours ago uploaded and I said sweet🙃
JOHN YOUR ARE THE BEST !
ITS BEEN A LONG TIME I 'VE READ A BOOK ....BUT THE NEXT I BUY IS ONE OF YOURS !
GRTS FROM THE NETHERLANDS JOHNY GEERTS
Oh shit, new JMG video dropped.
Great timing sir, the football is over and boom here's a JMG video
Do you create audio books for your novels or do radio?
Excellent video
Amazing input♥️
one of the great suprises is how buzy you have been this week.
Has Mr. Godier done a reading of one of his books yet? That would sell me on audiobooks right quick.
Not yet Jay, but just wait, the first will be free here on youtube in the form of The Salvagers. But there does exist an informal excerpt from Supermind that I did. It doesn't have all of the fancy audio editing and such, just me talking, but here it is:
ruclips.net/video/mZRmOCyPwrM/видео.html
then we should land on top of Olympus Mons and make a dome right?
Hi. Amazing videos here. Query: do you think NASA has self distruct devices on the Voyager probes and at the end of their power limit life it will destroy them just in case to avoid detection?
Happy new Lunar New Year
How do you join the members only videos?
I say go for the gusto and build our first Martian colony atop Olympus Mons. The view should be spectacular.
What's up guys, we are Cryogeyser...this first one is called
MASSIVE BOMBARDMENT
Great addition! I love to think that some of the earliest examples of ironwork were forged from fallen stars!
You'll probably like this:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tutankhamun%27s_meteoric_iron_dagger
Why are the craters on the moon so shallow? youd think a massive asteroid would leave a crated miles deep, but nothing on the moon is more than a couple hundred feet? Doesn't make sense.
He sounds like James Corbett from the Corbett Report.
Don't touch those celestial bodies, they are hot lava!
Good stuff
I wonder what it would look like if Olympus Mons erupted. I'm pretty sure that it's extinct now, but I do wonder what it would have been like when it was active
Anyone else think the wide field view looks just like the james webb that was just released a day ago?
Could it be that the moon is being knee des by earth's gravity and the area that's recently volcanic was the most sensitive area so it erupted while other areas didn't.
Why does the moon have only ⭕️ craters? Never comes in on an angle? Odd..
The angle ones could have been covered by the lava flows we xall the Mare. The oceans so named by early astronomers.
Impacts at an angle result in circular craters, like shown here:
ruclips.net/video/nbkkMKkjx6k/видео.html
Impacts coming in at an angle makes circular craters too.
Crater formation in slow motion. Impact Simulation. ruclips.net/video/sOs9kMpc3kY/видео.html
Scott Manley got a good video about it too.
Why Are Most Impact Craters Perfectly Circular? (Rather than Ovals)
ruclips.net/video/BCGWGJOUjHY/видео.html
Good observation, but bad assumption about what causes it. It isn't that objects never come in at an angle -- all of the impacting objects come in from angles. So what you really want to ask is this: what causes the roundness of the craters even though every crater is caused by objects approaching the moon from wildly different angles?
Then you crack open a physics textbook and figure it out.
I need your help John. I just heard from Anton that lacking gravity is doing us potential long term damage at the mitochondrial level.
I need some good news because this makes space travel much more expensive. We'll have to use rotation for gravity for longer distances, and it's just a mess.
Do you have an affordable solution?
No worries, rotation is cheap.
space is probably full of bacteria, or?
Could the fact that the Moon was close to the Earth early in history affect the rate of the moon's core cooling.
Just because we can't detect similar circumstances in other systems dies make us special. Once we get better tech we'll find more smaller planets.
1K likes but this video will be soaring way past that
From the thumbnail i thought finally a respectable person is going to tell me the moon is actually made of cheese.
The moon may be made of cheese but not good cheese. Kinda stale. However Io looks like a well baked pizza.
Imagine if Olympus Mons is responsible for life on Earth
I swore you said on a huge phuckin heavy.... 🤣
Good to know they got hotspots on Mars, was worried my wifi wasn't gonna work
I personally dont know if venus has volcanos