Revealing the Cosmos: A Startling New View from the James Webb Space Telescope

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  • Опубликовано: 31 дек 2024

Комментарии • 427

  • @user-cz8ks8ve7x
    @user-cz8ks8ve7x Год назад +161

    Love you Brian Greene. Thank you for all your effort putting together such amazing events. A true gift to humanity. 🙏

    • @savage22bolt32
      @savage22bolt32 Год назад +6

      He should keep politics out if science.

    • @gadoatl5133
      @gadoatl5133 Год назад +7

      @@savage22bolt3299 percent of the time, he does. Don’t get too worked up.

    • @vger2
      @vger2 Год назад

      @@savage22bolt32Conversely, too many politicians now keep science out of their politics, placing the safety of our world in danger (anti-vax, climate change denial, etc). The one Brian cited is the poster child and sadly, more are popping up on both sides (like RFK jr).

    • @carlkligerman1981
      @carlkligerman1981 Год назад

      As though a washed string theorist ‘put this together’. He’s the well paid celebrity to get us laymen watching this, interviewing the folks actually interested in doing science.

    • @jasoncole739
      @jasoncole739 Год назад

      1:01:18 pm

  • @KarlGlazebrook
    @KarlGlazebrook Год назад +24

    It was my pleasure to be on this show with Brian Greene

  • @suyapajimenez516
    @suyapajimenez516 Год назад +24

    Thank you Brian Greene for these interviews about JWT and its finds. The effort you made with questions, etc … you’re the best🙏

  • @trebledog
    @trebledog Год назад +14

    When I first started watching Brian Greene on the stream presenting talks on quantum mechanics, physics experiments, he was just about the age of these young scientists. It's a testament to Greene how many audiences he has reached bringing the message of the cosmos to the world.

  • @nik-btd
    @nik-btd Год назад +9

    That feeling when the smartest guys on this planet tell you stories.... I love this channel.

  • @bernstock
    @bernstock Год назад +8

    This channel is some of Brian Greene's best work imho

    • @manutara2007
      @manutara2007 Год назад

      This channel should have at least 100m subscribers...but nowadays it's more important what the Kardashians do...with all respect.

  • @rockshow2080
    @rockshow2080 Год назад +67

    Excellent as usual. Brian Greene is such a great communicator/mediator/ and able to explain complex things with ease so anyone can understand.
    In such a short time James Webb telescope is already changing our understanding of everything. Cant wait to see what gets confirmed and newly discovered

    • @Staring_Wolf
      @Staring_Wolf Год назад +1

      Agreed 👍🏻 Reading the Elegant Universe was my first introduction to cosmology. He is a great writer/teacher 🤙🏻

    • @independentfreethinkeroutl2176
      @independentfreethinkeroutl2176 Год назад

      this guy either works for the cia or is a member of the nwo criminal cabal syndicate or he's dumb as f not to recognize trump is saving humanity stopping the cabals agenda to over throw the world..

    • @davecurry8305
      @davecurry8305 Год назад +1

      So, is it possible that the universe emerged fully formed from the “big bang”?

    • @torfla1415
      @torfla1415 Год назад

  • @AdamWeeks
    @AdamWeeks Год назад +15

    Excellent! I can't wait to see the new discoveries.

  • @amincheema8710
    @amincheema8710 Год назад +11

    World science festival is the best forum I've come across. Following it for years. Always more to learn and presented in a wonderful way. Love the way the learned people generously share the knowledge. Thank you WSF. Thank you Brian Greene.

    • @andersask5503
      @andersask5503 6 месяцев назад

      Yeah, this video was stellar😊

  • @RonHarrisMe
    @RonHarrisMe Год назад +3

    I look forward to this Festival every year.

  • @RockEdison
    @RockEdison Год назад +2

    Brilliant minds make the world a beautiful place.

  • @mygirldarby
    @mygirldarby Год назад +17

    I absolutely love that image of Neptune. Its awesome! JWST is a true gift to science.

  • @mattneville2864
    @mattneville2864 Год назад +16

    I love this channel and this telescope.

    • @frednimzowi9852
      @frednimzowi9852 Год назад +2

      Watching you, the telescope might say:"My names is Webb. James Webb"😅

    • @puzzleplanetindia
      @puzzleplanetindia Год назад +1

      so do we buddy❤

    • @vblaas246
      @vblaas246 Год назад

      Need more WebbVR (vr game) updates. And HiRise stereo imagery! (Non anaglyph)

  • @brianhillary7469
    @brianhillary7469 Год назад +6

    I wanted to say thank you for your presentation. You do a great job of making these topics accessible, and approachable to non-scientest. On multiple occasions I've hurd you be self deprecating. Also on multiple occasions I've hurd you express a sincere invitation for anyone to consider the data. You do a great job of interpolating the shop talk of academics and literally bringing it down to earth. I really think that you are opening doors to future generations of scientists by making it more accessible. Thank you, to you and everyone behind the scenes who helps you.

  • @donlodge1230
    @donlodge1230 Год назад +2

    Brian Greene is such a brilliant interviewer - he knows exactly where he wants the conversations to go, because he already knows the subject so thoroughly.....

  • @KianGuerrero
    @KianGuerrero Год назад +2

    Thanks to Brian Greene for asking critical and good questions.. This is just beautiful. BEYOND beautiful!!!.

  • @naib5
    @naib5 Год назад +6

    So far the Best explanation of JWST

  • @PlanetXMysteries-pj9nm
    @PlanetXMysteries-pj9nm Год назад +1

    I was born with many difficulties in my life. Although I am not fully educated, I have a strong love for science and the universe. Thank you for bringing it to me. Love you

  • @SoniSingh-fl8cf
    @SoniSingh-fl8cf Год назад +11

    Thank you Professor Greene for another brilliant episode.

  • @UberPlaysAllGames
    @UberPlaysAllGames Год назад +2

    No scientific background of my own. Yet having watched all the WSF features, all of the “History of the Universe” and “Kosmos” channel videos I truly applaud the effort and work of these brilliant minds to bring about and share their discoveries with all of Mankind.

  • @caseyrayharris.esquire489
    @caseyrayharris.esquire489 Год назад +1

    Thanks to all of for taking time & sharing the exciting findings!

  • @PraSquad
    @PraSquad Год назад +16

    This was an excellent program that was both informative and excited the imagination.
    All the guests were phenomenal; however I must say that Michelle Bannister’s enthusiasm radiates brings me a joy I rarely feel these days. She seems so delighted to be doing what she does, and is very effective at serving the viewer with digestible bits of her experiences that are still contain enough elation to be pleasantly intoxicating.

    • @libradragon
      @libradragon Год назад +4

      Passion! This is the best embellishment of imaginative curiosity.

  • @MrVikingsandra
    @MrVikingsandra Год назад +13

    I seriously can't get enough of these incredible discussions! Thank you SO much for sharing, much much appreciated! ❤
    I'd also love to see a new Brian Greene book out soon... just sayin 😅 love your books!

  • @zastrzyk
    @zastrzyk Год назад +3

    THE BEST YT channel ever! thank U!

  • @manutara2007
    @manutara2007 Год назад +3

    Since I discovered this channel and many others, Now I am a big fan of RUclips as a knowledge platform if you find the proper channels. I even have the premium account. Thanks Brian🎉❤

  • @andersask5503
    @andersask5503 6 месяцев назад

    Brian is so good to make complicated terms easy to understand by a layman. And his presence on stage is so laid-back. He's a gem in the Physics world

  • @sober.warriors
    @sober.warriors Год назад +2

    Incredible times, u can have access to knowladge at this level for free. Amazing😊

  • @geraldinehughes4490
    @geraldinehughes4490 Год назад +5

    Stellar, my mind is giggling. Thank you so much. Geraldine

    • @theostapel
      @theostapel Год назад

      Turn of phrase - rather original. Now to test - said expression. Hee hee.

  • @scottcupp8129
    @scottcupp8129 Год назад +3

    This is just beautiful. BEYOND beautiful!!!

  • @MaghrebProductions
    @MaghrebProductions Год назад +4

    Finally WSF is slowly coming back to Face-to-Face. Keep it up!

  • @dawndead9591
    @dawndead9591 Год назад +13

    Excellent presentation. Nostalgically, as a boomer science fiction fan,
    I feel a small ache that Isaac Asimov can't share these new discoveries
    with us; there would be many others, but his books, the fiction buoyed
    by the science, still hold a very cherished claim on my not-so-rigorous
    sensibilities.

  • @Vib.H
    @Vib.H Год назад +1

    They are just all so positive and pleasant to listen to .. ..AND...may I add (?) They are just so talented....Here you can clearly see that it really is the "desire" that makes the work! What a great enthusiasm they show! They love their job...nice to watch...Bravo !
    Imagine if ALL workplaces had such a cool atmosphere?? Ohhh? haha! .😁

  • @Kai-pcheck
    @Kai-pcheck Год назад +16

    Excellent ! A pleasure to watch, a demonstration of how entertaining Science can be presented.
    My sincere thanks to Brian, the guests, and the whole production team.

  • @kagannasuhbeyoglu
    @kagannasuhbeyoglu Год назад +2

    It seems we have a long way to go. Our understanding of the universe is changing as data comes from James Webb.
    Thank you very much for this wonderful program Prof. Brian Greene

  • @Amethyst_Friend
    @Amethyst_Friend 8 месяцев назад

    JWST is brilliant! This talk was very interesting too.

  • @KianGuerrero
    @KianGuerrero Год назад +2

    This is just beautiful. BEYOND beautiful!!!. Thank you Professor Greene for another brilliant episode..

  • @mayflowerlash11
    @mayflowerlash11 Год назад +4

    The advances in our knowledge of the universe since JWST became functional is nothing less than mind blowing. There is life on other planets, the only unknown is how much, there is probably intelligent life elsewhere in our galaxy, again the only unknown is frequency.
    As a 67yo one minor regret is that I may not live long enough to know for sure that life has been discovered on other planets or that intelligent life has been discovered elsewhere.

    • @Vector_Ze
      @Vector_Ze Год назад +2

      My guess is that we'll have a colony on Mars sooner than the life question is definitively answered...if it ever is.
      I'm in the same boat as you, only a few years further along life's journey. At least we have eclipsed the entire history of humans in space to this point.

    • @mygirldarby
      @mygirldarby Год назад +2

      According to many NDE's I've heard, it may be that we will know all after life here. If we live to see life found on other planets, that will be awesome, but if we then die and no longer exist and our awareness is gone, what's the point in knowing anything anyway? It's only a moment in time, a blip in eternity, and seems meaningless in the bigger picture if we don't carry our awareness beyond our physical life. Knowledge, memories, insight...none of it matters if it is extinguished after a physical lifetime. It would be pretty worthless. I guess it can be passed to living humans to advance things but eventually our sun will destroy our planet, the universe will expand, it will likely die and there will be no trace of our physical life, and no evidence we even existed.

    • @mayflowerlash11
      @mayflowerlash11 Год назад +1

      ​@@mygirldarby You're right. I have thought about this exact point. What's the point of knowing anything anyway? I don't know of any way of determining the answer to this for sure. But just because we can imagine the question, ie why are we conscious, is not an argument in support of the convenient answer, which is, yes because we are conscious our life must have meaning. The alternative answer is just as likely. It's 7AM and 15 deg C, what a bloody awful time to consider the question.

    • @chrisfreebairn870
      @chrisfreebairn870 Год назад

      ​​@@mayflowerlash11ifficult to determine what your actually pondering, but if you think life has meaning other than what you imbue it with, then I guess you're still very young; meaning is a philosophical question, not a scientific one; the inability to cope with my answer is the crutch called religion.
      Consciousness allows you to ask that question, but that doesn't mean it's a useful question, except perhaps at parties to get chats going with ppl you want to hook up with.

  • @mandeepsingh-fd7mh
    @mandeepsingh-fd7mh Год назад +2

    This is my one of my favourite RUclips channel

  • @pirminborer625
    @pirminborer625 Год назад +2

    Thanks to Brian Greene for asking critical and good questions.

  • @NashPotatoesOutdoorShow
    @NashPotatoesOutdoorShow 11 месяцев назад +1

    5,312 confirmed planets outside of our solar system...pretty cool data!!

  • @lindascanlan6317
    @lindascanlan6317 Год назад

    I love Brian Greene...ty for all you do....

  • @TurdFerguson456
    @TurdFerguson456 Год назад +4

    ❤️Thank you, Tracy, and everyone @ WSF for the amazing content!❤️
    We really REALLY REEEAAALLLLLLYYY need more of these Professor. Especially about the DARK stuff🌌!
    And the other major unknowns like:
    •Black Holes🕳
    •The Big💥Bang?
    •Life👽!
    •Anything related to Quantum Field Theory⚛️!

  • @mithunravindran4178
    @mithunravindran4178 Год назад +4

    Brian Greene is my superhero, my kind of celebrity! ❤

    • @independentfreethinkeroutl2176
      @independentfreethinkeroutl2176 Год назад

      this guy either works for the cia or is a member of the nwo criminal cabal syndicate or he's dumb as f not to recognize trump is saving humanity stopping the cabals agenda to over throw the world..!

    • @wefinishthisnow3883
      @wefinishthisnow3883 Год назад

      They say never meet your heroes and I got the pleasure of meeting Brian in Sydney a few months ago and I can confirm that he's a great person to meet as well.

    • @garywoodford9901
      @garywoodford9901 Год назад

      I don’t understand why he is always bringing Trump into a scientific discussion. I think he has TDS.

  • @actiaint
    @actiaint Год назад +4

    Brian I have been fortunate enough to watch WSF for many years now: thank you! This presentation is among the best, Im a Kiwi but Michele's passion & communication is wonderful.

  • @patrickmckenney9663
    @patrickmckenney9663 Год назад

    ... many ? ... few ! ... JWST appears to have humbled us, to the point of realizing the extent of the speculative nature of our physical sciences ... a giant step forward ... also interesting the high degree of speculation, qualification and apparent evasion of revealing possible factual information here ... seems that it is very difficult to reveal that the answers simply are not measurably known ... the third segment guests are refreshingly candid about this ... bravo ...onward ...

  • @doughoffman3873
    @doughoffman3873 Год назад

    thanks WSF for always being so kickass. go JWST!

  • @richardrombouts1883
    @richardrombouts1883 Год назад +2

    Awesome. This kind of stuff makes me proud to be a human.

  • @RalphKirkham-g2i
    @RalphKirkham-g2i 5 месяцев назад

    That was an extremely interesting prodcast, that I truly enjoyed! Thank you

  • @balaji-kartha
    @balaji-kartha Год назад +2

    That was great. Thankyou ❤

  • @_o_
    @_o_ Год назад +2

    They do a good job of describing how fuzzy some of these calculations and hypothesis are....so many variables at play, and it's worth reminding ourselves we're still coming to terms with how far away Betelgeuse is with any solid accuracy, a star quite nearby. The "cold dark matter" we're so excited to assume is one of the missing pieces to our observation vs. physics has never been observed, not "dark" as much as completely indetectable and a bookmark for future discovery along with "dark energy" which is just a way of saying we don't know what the force is that dictates the expansion in our observations. Like dating human history using ancient pottery, things shift as our understanding changes. I feel like good cosmologists and experts will constantly remind us of these fuzzy edges and unknowns.

  • @AXharoth
    @AXharoth Год назад +2

    JWST is the real golden eye ^^

  • @rosamrc923
    @rosamrc923 Год назад

    ABSOLUTELY FANTASTIC!!!

  • @nunomaroco583
    @nunomaroco583 Год назад +6

    Hi from Portugal. ...

  • @blackawana
    @blackawana Год назад

    Awesome show...thanks.

  • @kel7483
    @kel7483 Год назад

    I enjoyed watching all the various Cosmology in Crisis presentations on different channels.

  • @Biskawow
    @Biskawow Год назад +3

    27:26 - 7 uhms in 10 seconds - amazing!

  • @naeberli9120
    @naeberli9120 Год назад +3

    Can we gat a IMAX movie of the discoveries. I'd love that and I'm sure many others would.

  • @rljpdx
    @rljpdx Год назад

    great presentation

  • @juliadean2473
    @juliadean2473 Год назад

    Very fascinating interviews and discussions. Thank you

  • @YoungMasterpiece
    @YoungMasterpiece Год назад +3

    Greetings from Montenegro stargazers!

  • @scottcupp8129
    @scottcupp8129 Год назад +2

    Consider this: Our Universe is one of an infinite number of Universes. Amazing Universe WE live in though isn't it? And the JWT brings us SO MUCH CLOSER TO IT !!

    • @zastrzyk
      @zastrzyk Год назад

      It suits the cosmological natural selection teory from Lee Smolin ;)

  • @willow_wise
    @willow_wise Год назад

    Thanks for the the interview.

  • @BruceKendallMartinJr
    @BruceKendallMartinJr Год назад

    "its like building cathedrals" i truly appreciate all involved...keep pushing us forward

  • @jamespkinsella5018
    @jamespkinsella5018 Год назад +1

    So interesting , fantastically enjoyable. I love it.

  • @NashPotatoesOutdoorShow
    @NashPotatoesOutdoorShow Год назад +1

    This is interesting...
    "The James Webb Space Telescope is an international collaboration between NASA, the European Space Agency (ESA), and the Canadian Space Agency (CSA). NASA is the lead partner on the project and has overall responsibility for the Webb mission."

  • @brianray2614
    @brianray2614 Год назад

    Amazing! Thank you!

  • @AB-yb1yt
    @AB-yb1yt Год назад

    fantastic, fantasic discoveries, fantastic, but we are not going to tell you what is fantastic. that is so fantastic!

  • @theresachung703
    @theresachung703 Год назад

    Thank you Brian

  • @momszycat4148
    @momszycat4148 Год назад +3

    So exciting ! I won't be here for the next upgrade in 30 years but I can only imagine how wonderful it will be! Excellent conversations. Thank You.

    • @Petticca
      @Petticca Год назад +2

      It is the awareness of some of the amazing things that science will be investigating, but not for some time, that I find to be the biggest misery that comes with being cognizant of our mortality.
      There are so many fascinating discoveries that will change how we understand our universe, and it's such a bummer to know that current advances in technology, which are already rapidly expanding our view, guarantees there'll be so much, that I would love to learn about, that'll happen after I have shuffled off this mortal coil.

  • @hannaraoul7731
    @hannaraoul7731 Год назад +1

    Thank you for sharing ❤ greetings

  • @jameshoey303
    @jameshoey303 Год назад

    Brian thank you for your magnificent work and sharing so generously your gift to educate. Thank you seems inadequate.

  • @gsilcoful
    @gsilcoful Год назад +1

    Great presentation.

  • @andreaadcock9218
    @andreaadcock9218 Год назад +4

    Just in time 🎉

  • @gohumberto
    @gohumberto Год назад

    Every new generagtion of telescope and microscope forces us to rewrite our understanding of the World and Universe.

  • @kevinc1956
    @kevinc1956 Год назад +3

    Some media mention there are areas of the universe we can no longer see due to the expansion of the universe having caused them to be moving away from our region of space faster than the speed of light. Other media, as this video does, speculate about being able to observe the earliest stars in the universe.
    I’ve always found it difficult to reconcile those two concepts. If we can’t see to the outer edges of the universe, how can we be sure we are estimating the age of the universe with any precision? Maybe that’s inherent in the math somehow, but I keep hoping someone will provide a clear explanation one of these days.

    • @mikotagayuna8494
      @mikotagayuna8494 Год назад +3

      We are living in an age where the Universe has not yet expanded at a rate where we are unable to make observations near the beginning of the Universe. That time will come so we are fortunate to be living in this window of time.

    • @kevinc1956
      @kevinc1956 Год назад +2

      @@mikotagayuna8494 Miko, I appreciate you replying. I enjoy reading about astronomy and cosmology, but I also find them to be pretty complex and math-intensive subjects once you start getting beyond the bounds of what I think is a typical layman’s understanding.
      The Wikipedia entry for Observable Universe notes that the inflationary theory of Guth, et al. “suggest that at present the entire universe's size is at least 1.5×1034 light-years-at least 3×1023 times the radius of the observable universe”. It’s those kind of statements that contribute to my current confusion or misunderstanding. Still, I enjoy learning about it and I’m a big fan of the World Science videos for their work to communicate science to the masses.

    • @LesterWayneDobos
      @LesterWayneDobos Год назад

      That’s if the Big Bang cosmology holds up.

    • @kevinc1956
      @kevinc1956 Год назад +1

      @@LesterWayneDobos Certainly. But I understand it to be one of the major theories in cosmological evolution and mentioned it to clarify my initial comment regarding the "observable" universe.

    • @LesterWayneDobos
      @LesterWayneDobos Год назад

      @@kevinc1956 Cosmology crosses my mind time to time. The early galaxies being 10x size of milky way hadn't the time to form so huge according to big bang timeframe. I have the assumption that beyond that is an infinite universe, not one of potential decay, but that is more of a philosophical discussion.

  • @Danboi.
    @Danboi. Год назад

    Never ceases to amaze. Extraordinary!

  • @jc1006
    @jc1006 Год назад +8

    Best update I've heard on the new James Webb telescope... Starship is going to bring way bigger telescopes into orbit in 5 years and we can learn so much more

    • @YogSoth
      @YogSoth Год назад +7

      Bigger telescopes in 5 years on Starship? I guess you work in pr for SpaceX. That or you are a delusional Elon fanboy/girl. Webb took 30 years to build. I’m sure it’s possible to advance more quickly but thinking that there will be a more powerful space telescope launched within 5 years is absurd.

    • @Vector_Ze
      @Vector_Ze Год назад +1

      @@YogSoth Especially on "Starship".

    • @jc1006
      @jc1006 Год назад

      @@YogSoth smol pp energy

    • @konstantin7596
      @konstantin7596 Год назад

      wtf are you speaking of?
      Delusional indeed

    • @mygirldarby
      @mygirldarby Год назад

      Elon is nothing more than tech Trump. Two men who both inherited obscene amounts ofmoney from their fathers. Both have little knowledge of their supposed "fields" they inhabit. Trump knows next to nothing about architecture or building. He just shells out his money and pays for his name to be slapped onto whatever building he wants to be associated with. Musk does the exact same thing. He knows very little about tech, but he pays to have his stupid name slapped onto various tech companies. He has destroyed Twitter because he paid enough to be in charge. Trump has done the same with casinos and various failed ventures he ruined over the years. Both men are just fools.

  • @hochathanfire0001
    @hochathanfire0001 Год назад +1

    neptune’s rings are just WOW and now on demand (can be seen anytime) 💃🥳😊

  • @evanmarkle2054
    @evanmarkle2054 Год назад

    On a read between the lines level Brian Greene is an absolute savage on many occasions

  • @sherrymanning1116
    @sherrymanning1116 Год назад +1

    Ty❤❤❤❤

  • @jdsguam
    @jdsguam Год назад

    Excellent. Very Informative.

  • @josephdonais4778
    @josephdonais4778 Год назад +1

    I am glad they finally got it off the ground. I'd been waiting 20 years. I only wish I had another 20 in me for it.

  • @WIPWs
    @WIPWs Год назад

    Wonderful knowledge 👍

  • @susankay497
    @susankay497 Год назад +3

    Incroyable

  • @TheThrowawaydog
    @TheThrowawaydog Год назад +51

    Greetings from Andromeda earthlings 👽🚀🛰

    • @bryanpinto4051
      @bryanpinto4051 Год назад +7

      wow, you speak English?

    • @MrBitterman75
      @MrBitterman75 Год назад +12

      See ya in 4 billion years. Beer’s on me👍

    • @JAEWST
      @JAEWST Год назад +11

      Ummm...could you frikkin not crash into us

    • @jestermoon
      @jestermoon Год назад +4

      Greetings 6 eyes, how are things with you and your 42 legs,🦵

    • @TheThrowawaydog
      @TheThrowawaydog Год назад

      @@MrBitterman75 That seems like a plan!

  • @fratercontenduntocculta8161
    @fratercontenduntocculta8161 8 месяцев назад

    Still the best Christmas present I’ve ever received. I gladly pay my taxes for this engineering marvel!

  • @Shivalika-b2h
    @Shivalika-b2h Год назад

    Eyes are for studying the composition of milky way galaxy. Good experience from this conversation.

  • @fishbrainCTRL
    @fishbrainCTRL Год назад +1

    My feeling is black holes are just an expression of a fifth spatial dimensional direction. Traveling towards a black hole would seem like you are getting closer to it as the environment shifts around you to resemble normal universe, but it wouldn't get any closer. Just like, traveling towards SPACE from EARTH is directionally UP.
    James Webb images in the early galaxy inspired this thought.
    Warping of spacetime affects our observations, and we mistake that for reality. If a black hole bends spacetime towards a singularity, time also bends around it.
    Black holes are likely just convex energies matching the universal concave.

  • @EventualRoads
    @EventualRoads Год назад +7

    Can’t believe I was high watching this. Still learned a lot tho 👍

  • @mayflowerlash11
    @mayflowerlash11 Год назад +4

    I have a question for the astrophysicists. Can we detect planets orbiting a star which has the rotational axis of the system pointed directly at the Earth? If not, how much does this limited the detection of planets?

    • @mikotagayuna8494
      @mikotagayuna8494 Год назад +3

      The transit method is not the only method used to detect planets. Astronomers can also look for wobbling as a result of a planet's radial velocity as well as the bending of the star's light due to effect of a planet's gravitation.

    • @mayflowerlash11
      @mayflowerlash11 Год назад +2

      @@mikotagayuna8494 Thanks for the reply. I had heard of the wobble detection method but forgot it. Wobble detection must be very difficult due to the size of the movement. I can't imagine how much the Sun moves in response to Jupiter's orbit but to detect that wobble at a distance of lightyears is mind blowing. Cheers.

  • @campursarian1977
    @campursarian1977 2 месяца назад

    I remember when Hubble launched, I was almost 14 years old. They were going to build the Terrestrial Planet Finder telescope, but it was canceled in 2011. I wouldn't be surprised if it happens again.

  • @radinelle
    @radinelle Год назад

    Fascinating!

  • @krishnabhutada3983
    @krishnabhutada3983 Год назад

    Fantastic

  • @armchairgravy8224
    @armchairgravy8224 Год назад +1

    I mean seriously, our observational capabilities have gone through a couple magnitudes in the last 100 years. It's as bananas as going from Wright brothers to Apollo landings in 70 years.

  • @robertkaminski9315
    @robertkaminski9315 Год назад +3

    i love SCIENCE

    • @vblaas246
      @vblaas246 Год назад

      Right?! Have you seen HiRise stereo imagery yet? (In vr)

  • @BilichaGhebremuse
    @BilichaGhebremuse Год назад

    I love the habitable world concept because it give as an apportunity new working place for mining agriculture construction by using a new kind of rover I have been working on to be universal usable in every task of human ...thanks I appreciate the great work of the web telescope engineers and designer and scientists as a whole..thanks..

  • @rhmcvay
    @rhmcvay Год назад +1

    Brilliant.

  • @dimitrijuszigunovas3782
    @dimitrijuszigunovas3782 Год назад +1

    beautiful

  • @denlillaekorren
    @denlillaekorren Год назад

    does anyone has a link to the picture mentioned at 1:15:22?

  • @jinstinky501
    @jinstinky501 Год назад

    What a treat!