Have We Finally Found the Source of Dark Energy?

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 22 май 2024
  • Dark energy, gravastars, and black holes. Go to betterhelp.com/astrum for 10% off your first month of therapy with BetterHelp and get matched with a therapist who will listen and help (ad).
    Astrum Podcast: www.buzzsprout.com/2250635/share
    Displate Posters: displate.com/promo/astrum?art...
    Astrum Merch! astrum-shop.fourthwall.com/
    Join us on the Astrum discord: / discord
    SUBSCRIBE for more videos about our other planets.
    Subscribe! goo.gl/WX4iMN
    Facebook! goo.gl/uaOlWW
    Twitter! goo.gl/VCfejs
    Astrum Spanish: / @astrumespanol
    Astrum Portuguese: / @astrumbrasil
    Donate!
    Patreon: goo.gl/GGA5xT
    Ethereum Wallet: 0x5F8cf793962ae8Df4Cba017E7A6159a104744038
    Become a Patron today and support my channel! Donate link above. I can't do it without you. Thanks to those who have supported so far!
    #astrum #astronomy #space #astrophysics #darkenergy #stars

Комментарии • 550

  • @carmamd
    @carmamd 2 месяца назад +73

    Thanks for these videos! I’m a 74y/o retired MD, with a lifelong love of math, physics, and esp. astrophysics, and never enough time or energy to study then being general college courses, until now. Your videos inspire and inform me❤❤

  • @BOEING--mh6xm
    @BOEING--mh6xm 2 месяца назад +163

    One of the few astronomy channels I watch on a daily basis
    Keep up the good work

    • @FelipeBorgesPB
      @FelipeBorgesPB 2 месяца назад +2

      same from here!

    • @nankinink
      @nankinink 2 месяца назад

      Yup, I miss SciShow Space as well

    • @nicholaschiam1347
      @nicholaschiam1347 2 месяца назад +3

      his content is intriguing, but sometimes his calming voice does soothe me to sleep

    • @bobdrooples
      @bobdrooples 2 месяца назад +1

      No wonderful people here?

    • @etherial8dtracks169
      @etherial8dtracks169 2 месяца назад

      I love history of the universe, aswell as antonpetrov

  • @muratarican2985
    @muratarican2985 2 месяца назад +55

    If I had known that Astronomy classes were lectured the way you do in your episodes, I would have chosen astronomy as a career..
    Beautiful work.

    • @eliuq4157
      @eliuq4157 2 месяца назад

      Wow 😮😊

    • @gsmollin2
      @gsmollin2 2 месяца назад +7

      No, they are not Astrum episodes. At the undergraduate level you get a physics degree. At the PhD level you can become an astronomer or cosmologist, and these are difficult degrees. After that you are a post-doc, and the whipping boy of whatever university you get your grant from. Now you have The opportunity to work yourself day and night to discover something of importance, maybe a dark energy star, so you become noticed and can get a tenured position. After reaching the big time you can still moonlight for a Japanese telescope company to make ends meet, especially if you work close to a major telescope such as the Keck in Hawaii. It’s a rat race.

    • @muratarican2985
      @muratarican2985 2 месяца назад +1

      @@gsmollin2
      Yes, the road to becoming an astronomer might be long and narrow but being a good science communicator like Carl Sagan -or Alex in this particular case- is so important to lure young people to choose a scientific path for their future careers I believe. And statistically for sure, a few of them will be good scientists.

    • @NosweatSam
      @NosweatSam 2 месяца назад +1

      It's mostly math. Calculating distances, luminosity, etc. So unless you're into that...

    • @rogerjohnson2562
      @rogerjohnson2562 Месяц назад +1

      Same could be said for mathematics, chemistry and philosohy; but sadly, they aren't lectured this way...

  • @bobzmuda3456
    @bobzmuda3456 2 месяца назад +13

    i love how the more we find out about deep space the more questions it raises and the more we realize how little we know

  • @stephenwise3635
    @stephenwise3635 2 месяца назад +42

    I'm going to have to watch this one a few times to let things sink in! Cheers Alex :)

  • @douglasboyle6544
    @douglasboyle6544 2 месяца назад +8

    One more interesting thing that you forgot to mention about Neutron Stars (which almost no one ever makes clear) is that they are almost pure neutrons - hence the name... but where did all the electrons and protons go that were in the star? Well once they get squeezed close enough to each other they combine and become more neutrons.

  • @andreasboe4509
    @andreasboe4509 2 месяца назад +50

    Speculation of alternative explanations are always good. We haven't made any real progress in cosmology for a long time, so we need all the speculation we can find and let the ideas compete with one another and compare them with observations.

    • @Red_Twizzler
      @Red_Twizzler 2 месяца назад +6

      What? When I was born, pluto was a planet, black holes hadn’t been photographed, and we didn’t have compelling evidence that we had a black hole in the center of our galaxy

    • @andreasboe4509
      @andreasboe4509 2 месяца назад +6

      @@Red_TwizzlerAstronomy is the testbed for cosmology, and that's my main interest. But you're right. We have made great progress in astronomy, and within the next five years we will have several magnificent new telescopes: Magellan, ELT, Roman, LSST and several other.

    • @rogerjohnson2562
      @rogerjohnson2562 Месяц назад

      no progress since lead poisoning dropped the worlds IQ by 15 points....

  • @petermarsh4993
    @petermarsh4993 Месяц назад +6

    Dear Alex, I do appreciate your show and the enormous amount of work that you put into each episode. There is one criticism of today’s dialogue when about 1/3rd the way through you talked about “Heat coming from the sun”.
    Heat is the progression of the vibration of molecules within gas, liquids or solids. The sun lives in a bath of vacuum and therefore heat cannot be emitted from the Sun’s surface. Radiation {eg Infrared EMR} can travel through a vacuum and in turn heats up gases, liquids and solids when it interacts with them on Earth. This is how heating of Earth happens but it is an indirect rather than a direct process. Cheers.

  • @LesterWayneDobos
    @LesterWayneDobos 2 месяца назад +12

    Wow. Fabulous video. Probably one of the most mind stimulating productions I have seen. Dark energy is the pressure which expands our universe, so I assume that black holes are definitely connected. No one wants to say we may be living in the equilibrium of a gravastar. Amazing concepts.

  • @carsonfrith6801
    @carsonfrith6801 2 месяца назад +53

    Always felt like astronomy pages overhype stuff but this one feels just right. Love that it’s trustworthy too just absolutely amazing

    • @laynedoe3455
      @laynedoe3455 2 месяца назад +1

      If u think astronomy pages 'overhype' stuff- it's cuz you don't understand how insane it really is. (It's not their fault you can't grasp it, and doesn't make them 'overhype'. It's a YOU problem 😂)
      Teeny tiny smooth brain 🙃 It's OK buddy

    • @walterwalter-ql1np
      @walterwalter-ql1np 2 месяца назад +10

      @@laynedoe3455 what

    • @Sylvester4571
      @Sylvester4571 2 месяца назад

      @@laynedoe3455I feel your insecurities through my screen

    • @Mc12136
      @Mc12136 2 месяца назад +4

      @@laynedoe3455What's wrong with you?

    • @jovetj
      @jovetj 2 месяца назад

      Yes-"feelings" are what matter in the world.

  • @IamGDuBs
    @IamGDuBs 2 месяца назад +10

    There has been so much new info coming out about black holes recently. It's a super exciting time to be intrested in this stuff. And From what I have heard other science channels say, James Webb is just getting started. the last year has been fine tuning it, and now we can get some very intresting data from it!

    • @SophiaAphrodite
      @SophiaAphrodite 2 месяца назад +1

      Consider there is a new massive telescope in Hawaii and another telescope being planned for launch as well that is even bigger. We will start generating 3d maps of the galaxy and universe with new telescopes and another one will be able to be pointed to a planet to detect life better than JWST.

  • @bigsarge2085
    @bigsarge2085 2 месяца назад +19

    Fascinating!

  • @frankiethebear
    @frankiethebear 2 месяца назад +3

    Alex, you are one of the most precious things in the Universe: An Educator. Thank you for all your work. 🙂

  • @auntvesuvi3872
    @auntvesuvi3872 2 месяца назад +1

    Thank you, Alex! 🌟

  • @justdoit83388
    @justdoit83388 2 месяца назад +2

    This video is absolutely fantastic!

  • @Dr_DoomJazz
    @Dr_DoomJazz 2 месяца назад

    Man that music at the beginning, the one with the bells, is haunting and beautiful

  • @freddyjosereginomontalvo4667
    @freddyjosereginomontalvo4667 2 месяца назад +2

    Awesome videos with great quality as always say 🌍🌟

  • @luco9155
    @luco9155 2 месяца назад +8

    I don't know why but I was thinking that every information you said just in the first 30 seconds of the video took Millennia to be discovered and making an astrophisicis of just 100 years ago or less listening to this 30 seconds would completelly blow his mind...

  • @stephenhamilton3499
    @stephenhamilton3499 2 месяца назад

    Great video 💪

  • @rustyshackleford5166
    @rustyshackleford5166 2 месяца назад +91

    That is either a duck or an extremely dense object mimicking a duck.
    Everything's funnier when you replace it with a duck, especially a rubber duck wearing a top hat.

    • @billynomates920
      @billynomates920 2 месяца назад +4

      duck energy duck

    • @rustyshackleford5166
      @rustyshackleford5166 2 месяца назад +7

      @@billynomates920 dense duck energy 🤣

    • @k.scheer5to1
      @k.scheer5to1 2 месяца назад +3

      Like a black goose wearing a derby mimicking a duck??!

    • @gabbyn978
      @gabbyn978 2 месяца назад +1

      For I moment I read 'extremely fast' and thought of that video with the alien bird.

    • @skyetic5775
      @skyetic5775 2 месяца назад +1

      kerzazagt viewer?

  • @michaelstriker8698
    @michaelstriker8698 2 месяца назад +3

    I'm leaning toward 1 more kind of star, the quark dwarf. (Not necessarily different externally from black hole, but different internally.) Only works if there is quark-degeneracy pressure, and probably only works with neutrons stars close to the neutron-degeneracy limit. Pre-quark neutron star vacuums up gas (interstellar medium) until second collapse. Then quark degeneracy takes over for interior. (An extension of _____'s book, "The Dragon's Egg", where a crustquake and collapse caused a size reduction.) If a collapse is gentle enough, and quark degeneracy exceeds neutron degeneracy, a quarkstar is possible. Still could be invisible, but not nigh-singularity.
    Just conjecture, though. While I've read of same-quark resistance to touching, I haven't read how close top and bottom quarks get in protons and neutrons.

  • @corinne7126
    @corinne7126 2 месяца назад +4

    Great video, very informative and much appreciated

  • @rubenoszbikeracers
    @rubenoszbikeracers 2 месяца назад +3

    I love your videos

  • @ShadowThePuppet
    @ShadowThePuppet Месяц назад

    I once saw a video about someone referring to this theorie, to suggest our universe is inside a black hole. With the edge of the observable universe being the event horizon. Matching the expansion. Pretty cool thought imo

  • @fekl0416
    @fekl0416 11 дней назад +1

    The reason i love learning about the universe because there are so many question that are answered and unanswered. I do believe that we only know 0.1% of what the universe has to offer and there are def things that humans will never discover or find out because our brains cant comprehand it

  • @Rochie
    @Rochie 2 месяца назад +2

    Love the format but references would be nice

  • @DIOMEDESABCMNXYZ
    @DIOMEDESABCMNXYZ Месяц назад +1

    ~ There shouldn't be any confusion about grav. blackholes, e.m. jet streams, or wormholes, because the balance of light energy & gravitational matter determines whether cosmic objects become strictly gravitational black holes, or e.m. jet streams (stars), & anything in between.
    Along with wormholes which are a equal density balance between both, as well as bound with their corresponding balanced & equilibrated strong & weak forces.
    ~ The blackhole/jetstream in the center of the Milky Way Galaxy is the e.m./grav. finite & mortal signature of our Milky Way Galaxy, which is also bound by it's correspective Strong & Weak Forces as well.
    ~ In conclusion: The balance & equilibrium of Strong & Weak Forces determine the color, shape, size, & spatial qualities of a grav. blackhole, e.m. jet stream, or a wormhole, in both space & time.

  • @pepeluis766
    @pepeluis766 4 дня назад

    Muy buen vídeo, enhorabuena!
    Puede ser que el gravastar sea la consecuencia de un agujero negro?
    La energía se contrae tanto en un agujero negro que la materia se polariza en forma de radiación y espacio-tiempo.
    Este espacio-tiempo se expandiría posteriormente en la siguiente capa en forma de energía oscura.
    Esta idea hace que el gravastar no sea necesario, pero sí existiera, debería ser consecuencia de un agujero negro

  • @3twibles4sweetrevenge
    @3twibles4sweetrevenge 2 месяца назад

    Man.. glad you posted today. My phone malfunctioned and i lost multiple hours of work yesterday

  • @MemeAnt
    @MemeAnt 2 месяца назад +17

    Quick note, betterhelp has done some shady stuff in the past, and I would recommend avoiding them in the future.
    Love the content here, keep it up!

    • @KORGULL-ISOLATES
      @KORGULL-ISOLATES 2 месяца назад +1

      Why are if not surprised
      👁️‼️👁️

    • @juandiegoprado
      @juandiegoprado 2 месяца назад +2

      What did they do?

    • @Quinini76
      @Quinini76 2 месяца назад

      A quick check says that they like selling customer data.@@juandiegoprado

    • @MemeAnt
      @MemeAnt 2 месяца назад +2

      @@juandiegoprado if I recall correctly, something about selling private data which they did not disclose. I will admit I do not know much about the situation, so take that with a grain of salt.

    • @juandiegoprado
      @juandiegoprado 2 месяца назад +1

      @@MemeAnt Ahhh didn't know. Thanks for the info

  • @kirk1147
    @kirk1147 2 месяца назад

    A GRAVISTAR??? Ouch! I think you just bent my brain.
    Superb video Alex! 10/10!

  • @king_kiff3969
    @king_kiff3969 2 месяца назад +2

    I bet both my testicles that these stars do not exist or never have existed in our universe.

    • @amandahugginkiss55
      @amandahugginkiss55 2 месяца назад

      Wow, I have no juevos to risk but I'd like to be there when this bet is called.

  • @amelia20044
    @amelia20044 2 месяца назад +2

    Not even two minutes in and i already got an ad man

  • @robbierobinson8819
    @robbierobinson8819 2 месяца назад +3

    Every time another Astrum video comes out, I just gravitate to it. This is another excellently presented, mind expanding topic. Astrophysics is getting weirder by the " - - -day, week, month or even year - - -". Are gravistars the universal version of antigravity generators?

  • @Etimespace
    @Etimespace 2 месяца назад

    Yes. Expanding black stars which emit expanding dark energy / pushing force❤

  • @domgjertsen563
    @domgjertsen563 2 месяца назад

    Fantastic 🙏

  • @ezelizer
    @ezelizer Месяц назад

    Thanks!

  • @js70371
    @js70371 2 месяца назад +1

    I want to see this channel break 2M subscribers this year!! 💫🙏

  • @johnkerr762
    @johnkerr762 2 месяца назад +2

    Very interesting, so, if we follow the naming convention for neutron stars, could a white dwarf then be called an electron star since it's balancing on the electron degeneracy pressure limit?

  • @complex314i
    @complex314i Месяц назад

    So the pressure values falls along a vertical asymptote through ever increasing magnitude negatives to a point of infinity or POI, where infinity and negative infinity are one and the same. The pressure then falls through the POI and down through lower magnitude positives.
    As a mathematician, I played around with replacing the x and y axes of the Cartesian grid with real projective lines. This replaces the infinite 2D plane with a torus.
    The outermost ring is y = 0.
    The central interior ring is y = POI
    The front most vertical ring is x = 0
    The back most vertical ring is x = POI
    The graph of y = 1/x around x = 0 shows the behavior described above perfectly.
    While I just thought that this would be fun to play around with, going through a POI and wrapping around bridging positives and negatives was never a feature I thought could be part anything that truly exist. But it would be fascinating to be proven wrong about that.

  • @TheHappyhorus
    @TheHappyhorus Месяц назад +1

    I’ve been thinking that black holes are just exotic stars (sort of) for years and years, but humans don’t like things that have opposite effects and we can’t wrap our heads around things like this easily.

  • @thomassecurename3152
    @thomassecurename3152 2 месяца назад +204

    Love ASTRUM. For non-scientists; I’ve read it take a million years for a photon to radiate outward from the sun’s center til we see it. If there is some truth, please explain. Thanks. Tom. Poulsbo, Washington

    • @FFNOJG
      @FFNOJG 2 месяца назад +72

      Individual photons bump into individual particles due to pressure, density, and heat, and sometimes they are absorbed, and then re-emitted. the sun is a huge ball, and this can take a very very long time due to all the chaos.

    • @ewilgreen5148
      @ewilgreen5148 2 месяца назад +65

      Yes, the photons bounce around in the sun like small pinballs, though for the photon, no time has passed, because of time dilation they don’t experience time at all, space is truly wierd and wonderful.

    • @thomassecurename3152
      @thomassecurename3152 2 месяца назад

      @@ewilgreen5148 Thank you. Astrum, IMHO, is the best overall layman’s channel.

    • @castleanthrax1833
      @castleanthrax1833 2 месяца назад

      ​@@ewilgreen5148Photoms are non-sentient and have no idea of time or anything else.

    • @davidarundel6187
      @davidarundel6187 2 месяца назад +7

      It's the pressure of the gasses it's burning ; lager stars the grater the pressure & longer it takes for htons to be seen .
      The explanation given by Alex , in the first 3-4 minuets , , followed by the nature of white dwarfs and neutron- stars .
      Red giants , are more prone to going to nebula stage - a big bang .
      The rest , including black holes , and smaller objects , was included , while typing this up . Hope it helps , as what's n the post is part of my own aquired knowledge .

  • @timteecvhn
    @timteecvhn 2 месяца назад +3

    Here's something I've always figured to probably be way more plausible for black holes than most would reckon, which is... The fact that although they appear infinitely dense due to the fact that they are almost a true singularity, which would be infinitely dense and whatnot, They are not. In fact a rather interesting thing is... that black holes, if you could reach their surface safely without being ripped apart the moment you even got close to the event horizon in the slightest, would be immeasurable bright because of light's inability to escape. Which would also simultaneously make black holes the hottest objects in our universe because of the inability for light to radiate off like a star or stellar remnant.
    Furthermore, your retinas, would be fried on the spot the moment you even looked up out of the blackhole if they weren't fried the moment you saw the surface of the black hole.
    Furthermore, a theoretical star that has no real gravity that can be interacted with... although mathematically possible, I'd... reckon in terms of the real world, would be unlikely to ever see. Though on the other hand if we do encounter exotic stars. One such one that although would be more likely possible in an artificial format rather than natural... is a quantum energy star of sorts. A star whose existence is solely attached to quantum mechanics. And whose core would be a black hole potentially, that would also not only be fed by the star, but also feed the star too in the process. Relying on the potential unknowns of quantum mechanics to grow exponentially if not properly contained. Of course it'd be unlikely to see such a star, let alone one with a black hole at it's core in terms of natural ones.

    • @Jason75913
      @Jason75913 2 месяца назад +1

      Not just your retinas, but your entire body would be vaporized in a femtosecond or something, no?

    • @timteecvhn
      @timteecvhn 2 месяца назад

      @@Jason75913If your protection against the gravity doesn't protect against the sheer ungodly heat within. Yeah. it would.

    • @Jason75913
      @Jason75913 2 месяца назад

      @@timteecvhn but I mean, the heat is irrelevant if the light is allowed to touch you, that alone would vaporize you, so either you are protected from the light and continue to only see absolute black or you get vaporized by the extreme dosage of photons

    • @ktx49
      @ktx49 2 месяца назад

      ​@Jason75913 all radiation is photons

    • @Boneyard1
      @Boneyard1 2 месяца назад +1

      Rhubarb

  • @scottmichaelharris
    @scottmichaelharris 2 месяца назад +3

    Anything denser than a neutron star will still affect light the same way as a black hole. Or is there a type of particle that can escape?

    • @Yezpahr
      @Yezpahr 2 месяца назад +3

      Theoretically, if it exists then the Graviton must escape from black holes, but it's not quite explained in the theory.
      This abnormality is why it probably doesn't exist. But this abnormality might just mean they got the polarity wrong, perhaps Gravitons work into the direction of no Graviton pressure just like fluids/gases do, but this raises the question... is it a virtual particle or a wave, or real particle?
      33% chance that when it exists it doesn't inhibit its own movement, much like a photon is its own antiparticle. Also 66% chance it raises more issues than fixes.

    • @scottmichaelharris
      @scottmichaelharris 2 месяца назад

      @@Yezpahr but would you be able to tell if the graviton came past or from the event horizon?

  • @MountainFisher
    @MountainFisher 2 месяца назад

    A member of my astronomy club is an astrophysicist at New Mexico State University here in Las Cruces. He talked about it to me and a couple of other members and said some people just cannot say I do not know, they _have_ fill it in with something. I'm a retired bio/engineer and stayed out of it, we have our own dogmatists with the same problem. It's just funny to me now.

  • @rmx4087
    @rmx4087 2 месяца назад +1

    Dark energy - the invisible inflating unicorn.

  • @theklaus7436
    @theklaus7436 2 месяца назад +1

    The knowledge we get from physics is actual astonishing. I’ll wait for more information before commenting on this

  • @5jd1
    @5jd1 Месяц назад

    I think there's a lot to consider when talking about this, I also think we always look at the basic system we know to explain what we don't, EG: cold is the absence of heat, dark is the absence of light, vacuum is the absence of matter....... Or is it? is there more to this, and the base values are just not measurable in our 3dimensional plane. obviously this will offer so much more debate, and we really done have the space on here to do it? or do we?

  • @ahmed91750
    @ahmed91750 2 месяца назад +1

    Your videos are my bed time stories

  • @Jonnygurudesigns
    @Jonnygurudesigns 2 месяца назад

    Great content, commenting for the algorithm

  • @Raziel1984
    @Raziel1984 2 месяца назад +1

    i would like to know what is the definition of a star... if a neutron star is a star then a black hole should be a type of star as well

  • @jeffallen3382
    @jeffallen3382 2 месяца назад +1

    Where else would it lurk? Of course it's in our universe! Everything is in our universe! LOL

  • @mr.fallen1486
    @mr.fallen1486 2 месяца назад +5

    Great video 10/10

    • @shanathered5910
      @shanathered5910 2 месяца назад +1

      you wrote this comment on a 17 minute video only one minute after release, you haven't watched it when you wrote the comment.

    • @mr.fallen1486
      @mr.fallen1486 2 месяца назад

      @@shanathered5910 I have watched the entire video

    • @castleanthrax1833
      @castleanthrax1833 2 месяца назад +1

      The video was posted 25 minutes ago, and your comment was posted 23 minutes ago, so no, you had not watched it all when you posted your comment.

    • @mr.fallen1486
      @mr.fallen1486 2 месяца назад

      ​@@castleanthrax1833early access 🤷‍♂️

    • @bloodsiphon4695
      @bloodsiphon4695 2 месяца назад +1

      Called out

  • @quantumfoam539
    @quantumfoam539 2 месяца назад +1

    We have direct radio waves images (let's call them photos) of at least two black holes from the event horizon telescope though. So at least these two have to be real black holes?

  • @cykkm
    @cykkm 2 месяца назад +3

    13:40 I'm failing to parse this sentence, can anyone help me please? ‘So far ... the radius of the black hole candidates we _see_ ... is at least approximately equal to their Schwarzschild radius: in some cases, that’s just a rough estimate, _but in others, we’ve calculated that radius to within 40 decimal places.’_ (emph. mine). If I read it as ‘the radius of the black hole candidates we _observe_ in some cases [the "others" in the original sentence] was calculated [based on these observations] to 40 decimals’, it becomes sheer nonsense: nothing has been ever measured to 40 _or more_ decimal accuracy (the 'calculation' implies other inputs, with their own uncertainties), and unlikely will in the next 200 years if at all.
    The most precise experimental measurement ever made has been the electron's gyromagnetic anomaly _g−2,_ calculated to 10 decimals from a measurement done to whopping 13 decimals. That's in the lab experiment, and all astrophysical observations I'm aware of are a far cry from these. 40, 30, 20, 10, 7 decimals spell nonsense in this context. Additionally, a high-precision measurement consistently yielding the _Schwarzschild_ radius, not Kerr (rotating), even if made to 3 decimals, not 40, would mean that these candidates, if really BHs, are (nearly) non-rotating. We know that newborn neutron stars spin like crazy, exactly what we expect from the law of angular momentum conservation, and there is no reason to believe that a collapse to a BH instead of a NS would not result in the high angular momentum of the BH. We know the Milky Way's SBMH approximate spin, too, and it's definitely non-zero beyond counting any sigmas, despite low accuracy/precision. More to this, GW signatures match rotating BH mergers, where certainty is high enough. None were _definitely_ non-spinning; there were only spinning and "maybe". I wouldn't have missed such a revolutionary discovery paper; it would turn our understanding of a lot of physics on its head, up to questioning the very angular momentum conservation validity.
    I obviously misreading the sentence, but I cannot understand in any other way, whichever linguistic contortions I try; it's pretty straightforward. Obviously, you can calculate an imaginary, theoretical case to an arbitrary precision, but the statement is clearly about calculations from observational data: 'the radius of the black hole candidates we _see_ ... we’ve calculated ... to within 40 decimal places'. Any help out there translating that for me, please?

  • @evilpandakillabzonattkoccu4879
    @evilpandakillabzonattkoccu4879 2 месяца назад

    When I learned about the large explosions in space that are, seemingly, from nowhere.... and wondered if it could be a dark matter/energy star or maybe a star made of antimatter... going supernova.
    I don't know enough, however, to know just how ridiculous of an idea that is. 😂

  • @DarthJarJarBinks_
    @DarthJarJarBinks_ 2 месяца назад

    I really hope we get more follow up on this. I think that this being a potential answer to dark energy is a very compelling proposal.

  • @hydraulichydra8363
    @hydraulichydra8363 2 месяца назад +1

    Some scientists theorize that the most exotic matter might for the smallest, _heaviest_ and most dense star possible.... Your mom!

  • @kirbymarchbarcena
    @kirbymarchbarcena 2 месяца назад +2

    Things get complicated when new things are introduced in the world of physics.

  • @waaaaantube
    @waaaaantube 2 месяца назад

    Astrum : Dark Energy
    Me : Ah....My type of star....

  • @GizzyDillespee
    @GizzyDillespee 2 месяца назад +4

    My personal challengeable belief is that singularities only exist mathematically.

    • @MisterCuddlez
      @MisterCuddlez 2 месяца назад +1

      I agree, though I am woefully underqualified to really even have an opinion on the matter. On a side related note: what would a naked singularity look like?

    • @devronw6974
      @devronw6974 2 месяца назад

      I agree as well. I believe when the math shows zero volume it is correct but referring to zero volume of space within the "object" that is within the event horizon not zero volume within our spacetime js

  • @davidelliott5843
    @davidelliott5843 2 месяца назад

    We are told a black hole collapses to a singularity. Nobody asks why it needs to go that far. I believe the object simply has to be massive enough to prevent light escaping. The lump at its centre will be there. You just can’t ever escape its gravity. If you can actually get that fat during the life of the universe. Time stops at the speed of light. Gravity at the event horizon stops light so presumably it stops time as well.

  • @laucian9181
    @laucian9181 2 месяца назад

    An interesting vid idea, since you decided to talk about unrealistic stars, is different colors. I understand why we probably wouldn't be able to see them because blue/red shift, but could they exist? Like a green star for example. When you burn certain elements they can flare up in many colors, so could the same be true for a star that contains an ample amount of differing elements, or would it just cause problems or a collapse?

  • @Always_has_been
    @Always_has_been 2 месяца назад +1

    How wonderful is it to hover at the edge of knowledge

  • @julia-6195
    @julia-6195 2 месяца назад +3

    It's sad that there is so much light pollution that I have to remember the night sky from my childhood or drive 100 miles.

  • @FoogleBoogle
    @FoogleBoogle 2 месяца назад +8

    I Love "Exotic Stars" am i right fellas

  • @dannyyoung9789
    @dannyyoung9789 2 месяца назад

    I’ve been trying to get some science coverage of the infrared star in dune 2 because for the life of me I don’t understand how that would work or if it’s even possible for light to sap the colour of things that way. Would love a video on the various questions about the giedi prime star.

  • @arrmii
    @arrmii 7 дней назад

    Interesting topic, but your charisma has all the captivating qualities of a house plant, which, I'm certain, would present it in more engaging manner, if given the opportunity. I could not watch it for more than 4 minutes without falling asleep

  • @nahf4m
    @nahf4m 2 месяца назад +2

    Plot twist, The universe is contained inside of a gravistar

  • @Enjoymentboy
    @Enjoymentboy 2 месяца назад

    I'm curious how neutron degeneracy pressure is affected/counteracted by centrifugal force generated by the star's spin. If the star at the absolute minimal mass to be a neutron star and was spinning so fast that its surface was moving very quickly, let's say 50% the speed of light, would that reduce the neutron degeneracy pressure enough to "break" it out of being a neutron star?

  • @lancemcclung3991
    @lancemcclung3991 2 месяца назад

    Enjoying Astrum Sleep Space but can never sleep as I’m left wanting more science.
    Please consider an audio book on astronomy/astrophysics A Walk Through the Universe with Alex McColgan

  • @SophiaAphrodite
    @SophiaAphrodite 2 месяца назад +1

    IT would be interesting if a black hole creates dark energy and matter by consuming the matter it takes in, in such a way it separates the matter from the gravity and leaves the gravity behind and we merely call it dark matter/ energy because of this supposition that gravity cannot exist without some kind of matter to exert it and there is actually nothing but the gravity to measure. So instead Black holes are just recycling gravity by stripping the matter from it and that gravity itself is not tied to anything, it is just attracted to mass. We did decide that gravity was not a thing but a byproduct of mass. Maybe we are wrong? Maybe a black hole merely strips away the mass and gravity Is dark matter/ energy? This would also explain that as the universe expands, dark matter and energy are fillings the voids. The reason is there is nothing for it to be attracted to? We assume dark energy is causing the universe to expand, maybe it is because it is gravity without mass to attach to so it expands. Since the universe is getting emptier and emptier the gravity is merely it's own accelerant as it accumulates with no mass and that is also why it is speeding up and everything is expanding away from each other?

  • @remc2
    @remc2 2 месяца назад

    Could possibly both versions of extremely dense objects exist in our universe? I am rather fantasising than speculating now, since I have no background in astrophysics: Could that be an explanation for the observed gap in the size of black holes, like: Stellar black holes are "real" black holes, whereas super massive black holes are of the even more exotic type?

  • @liamfoxy
    @liamfoxy 2 месяца назад +3

    Now.. this may be stupid.. but what are the chances our universe is simply existing inside a developing Gravistar? It would explain the steady expansion rate, along with the tendency to vacuum. The curvature would also make sense. It is also maybe possible that the big bang was the infinity flipping from negative to positive? I don't like the idea, but it's a thought

    • @Jason75913
      @Jason75913 2 месяца назад +1

      Some speculate that the universe is possibly occurring inside a "white hole", and there may be a bigger universe outside of this one we're in.

    • @rahul9704
      @rahul9704 10 дней назад

      @@Jason75913 Here me out; a white hole inside a gravistar

  • @ag3ntmp339
    @ag3ntmp339 Месяц назад

    So they saying that they have separated a black light sun and a black hole, nice. Because I've wondered about that with some black holes giving off invisible light or gas but they are supposed to only absorb theoretically

  • @Drew_goo
    @Drew_goo 2 месяца назад +1

    I like this video for the layman. But man. Each sentence it feels deserves its own video

  • @matthew_scarbrough
    @matthew_scarbrough 2 месяца назад

    Well, I would think that if a gravistar exerts no gravitational force no matter how close or far you are from it (maybe even touching it or sticking your finger in it), then it can't be a black hole, because black holes exert gravitational force.

  • @BrianFedirko
    @BrianFedirko 2 месяца назад +1

    black holes could be everywhere including where in this video, and be opposite of what we make of them. They could be dense enough that they "gravitate" to a larger dimension size than our own observation... like the view from inside an atom to the concept of a distant molecule. Attraction can be inside and out and beyond this even, getting larger and yet smaller infinitely. It boggles the mind to think bigger or smaller than we do right now, but it has to be possible, it's there even if it isn't. Gr8! Peace ☮💜

  • @Astristul
    @Astristul 2 месяца назад +1

    Since nobody actually studied a black hole, up close, any theory seems valid in this moment.

    • @Mannwhich
      @Mannwhich Месяц назад +1

      Observed is the word you're looking for I think. And that's the problem, all they can do is make up a bunch of math. It's all based on assumptions, and very little observation. First they say not even light can escape, and now there's energized particles escaping? Which is it?

  • @domonator5000
    @domonator5000 Месяц назад

    I think it’s possible all of these celestial objects exist simultaneously. I think it’s possible objects like Grav-stars can exist, and I think that there could be a variety of different types of what we would consider to be black holes; both the traditional gravitational singularities, and these newer hypothesized “troves of dark energy”. I theorize that it’s due to the lack of precision and advancement with our instruments that makes it difficult to tell what is objectively true or not for certain

  • @anticat900
    @anticat900 2 месяца назад

    I'm not sure from this, it seems to say there are Back holes AND there are Gravastars. Both can look similar but have very different interiors? Of Gravastars form from collapsing stars and negative energy matter (never heard of that before more detail required), then how do black holes get created?

  • @ag3ntmp339
    @ag3ntmp339 Месяц назад

    15:02 basically sounds like a load of hoopla then. They don't even know what to actually know by the sounds of it

  • @aceentity7703
    @aceentity7703 Месяц назад

    Electron degeneracy pressure. A new term for me but I love it, thank you

  • @triplebog
    @triplebog 2 месяца назад +1

    I have often wondered if dark energy isn't some sort of pulling at the threads of spacetime. Like, what if instead of dark energy pushing at everything to cause it to expand, if instead spacetime was a threadbear sweater, with large sources of gravity pulling at the fabric, causing it to expand and stretch out, giving the appearance that things are being pushed farther away, when instead, space is just being pulled "thinner"

    • @LordLotman
      @LordLotman 2 месяца назад

      Never thought about it. That way I feel like that makes perfect sense, for real, not being sarcastic good point! lol

    • @erkinalp
      @erkinalp 2 месяца назад

      @@LordLotmanNot as mathematically convenient as the fixed speed of light, expanding space model though.

  • @reynaerd9741
    @reynaerd9741 Месяц назад

    Idk, the way you described gravistars would make them seem quite rare, as you would need extraordinary circumstances to balance the gravity and pressure like that. By just the amount of dark energy there is supposed to be in the universe (it is supposed to comprise up to 70% of everything) I don't think it is plausible that gravistars would make up the bulk of dark energy. Maybe a small portion of it, but certainly not all of it.

  • @marjieestivill
    @marjieestivill 2 месяца назад

    A plausible model of The Great Attractor(s)!

    • @UpperDarbyDetailing
      @UpperDarbyDetailing 2 месяца назад +2

      The great attractor is a giant group of galaxies. We can already see it.

  • @TheKirov21
    @TheKirov21 Месяц назад

    What is the track on the background in the beginning?

  • @doctorcrankyflaps1724
    @doctorcrankyflaps1724 2 месяца назад +12

    Better Help are not good.

  • @ADHSV113
    @ADHSV113 2 месяца назад

    Wait, isn’t this similar to the Alcubierre metric and drive equations? What are the exact equations behind these gravity stars again?

  • @Pitchblackbones
    @Pitchblackbones 2 месяца назад

    Fascinating - I’ve heard of gravastars in the past but I didn’t know the slightest about them.
    If this is true, that they exert exactly zero gravitational pressure, is that *only* at its’ surface, and gravitational pressure exists perhaps further out from the surface of its’ radius?
    Meaning like any other star, an object would be drawn in by outlying waves of gravity exerted by the system, but *at the surface* the gravitational pressure equalizes?
    If so, one might think that it would create something that for all intents and purposes APPEARS to be a singularity - (no visible object PASSES the surface) when in actuality these objects become trapped within this “vacuum space”, where their motion is functionally neutralized?
    Maybe I’m confused by the mechanics at play here

  • @nunyafunyuns
    @nunyafunyuns 2 месяца назад

    Black holes are a never ending source of fascination for me. I sometimes wonder if they're behind the creation of the universe in general. Maybe we're inside one right now.

  • @Malgus929
    @Malgus929 2 месяца назад

    I’ve always wanted to see a green star be discovered. I know it’s a very thing wavelength to achieve but I’m sure there has to be at least one in the universe

    • @Jason75913
      @Jason75913 2 месяца назад

      It would have to be a boron star or something.

  • @darianleyer5777
    @darianleyer5777 2 месяца назад

    Planck Stars. These are nature's last-ditch effort to avoid singularities. They get their name from their size: Subatomic.
    How do they avoid becoming singularities?
    The Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle.

  • @jarodmasci3445
    @jarodmasci3445 2 месяца назад

    I'm still confused..... why wouldn't sufficiently dense/massive objects have an event horizon? Wouldn't the resulting gravitational effects be strong enough to prevent light from being emitted/escaping if the light is close enough to the object? Wouldn't the distance be an event horizon?

  • @leonardgibney2997
    @leonardgibney2997 Месяц назад

    So black holes are the final arbiters of the fate of the Universe if I've understood that correctly? I'm archiving this video, very precious.

  • @brunoborma
    @brunoborma 2 месяца назад

    What is the music playing around 3' ?

  • @shadowlinkfire
    @shadowlinkfire Месяц назад

    well... black holes do slowly emit radiation and over time diminish in size and weight and density. Last time i heard and checked we have proved hawking radiation but we havent actually detected it. so if every black hole is emitting a form of radiation that we know exists but we havent detected yet, is that not a form of dark energy?

  • @AifDaimon
    @AifDaimon 2 месяца назад +1

    early Sunday morning here

    • @JimiFargo
      @JimiFargo 2 месяца назад +1

      It’s Saturday evening for me

  • @alexns
    @alexns 2 месяца назад +2

    I keep saying it! The universe is infinite!

  • @albertdalton9644
    @albertdalton9644 2 месяца назад

    Hey Mr. Astrum, what would happen if a large asteroid hit the Moon? I was watching one of your videos on the Moon and all the pockmarks made me wonder what kind of chaos that would cause.