Universe Size Comparison 3D | British Couple Reacts
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 30 июл 2022
- Universe Size Comparison 3D | British Couple Reacts
Check out our Merch! - the-beesleys-merch-shop.creat...
Support the Channel on Patreon - / beesley
If you would like to Donate VIA Paypal to our Wedding Fund - paypal.me/thebeesleyswedding?...
P.O Box -
FAO: James Beesley
The Good Egg Farmers
P.O Box 19
JERSEY
JE4 9NH
Thank you so much for watching this reaction video!
Please smash that like button and subscribe!
Discord - / discord
Twitter - / beesleyyt
Original Video - • Universe Size Comparis...
Comment below more reaction ideas or DM me on Twitter!
Patreons (Thank you so Much) (Updated 1st of every Month) -
David Moses
Carol Haddock
Matt
Jennifer Bunn
Henry Braswell
Matthew Smith
grizzleygamer
Jenniffer Maddy
Joseph
HavanaJoe
Simone Addo
Alex Calabrese
Danielle Colcher
Daniel Collins
caleb hylton
Daddy Dogg Abbott
Sylvester Middlebrook
Amy Aguirre
Brian Daugherty
Charles Prince
Ronnie Honeycutt
Lorenzo Mitchell
Richard Iriarte
Keith Boyd
Scott Radecki
PA Mike
Angela Kinzel
David T. Menzies
Badllama
John miller
Andrew Engelhart
JOHN KELLEY
KamCA
Corry Manning
Brennen Andrusko
Robert Baker
Melody
v b
Mike Kirkpatrick
Lil blond
Jen
KAP 814
Brian Voiles
Jacob Herricks
Sherry Bradshaw
Chris Rivers
Elizabeth
Cindy Akins
Renee Bowlin
Paul Bennett
cody lang
Rick Hart Woodworking
kristine hack
Chris Eppler
Raymond Davis
Emily Hawks
Margaret Odonnell
Sandra Ratliff
Larry Adams
Allison White
Sharon Banks
Roy Massey
Jessica Saranczak
denise
John Marzula
Larry Schulze
Larry C
Suzanne Cole-Rice
Lucas Crockett
Denise Hall
Jason Eells
Tracy F.
Adam Seagle
Jon Hammontree
Brian Walker
Jennifer Wilson
Denise Schlaeger
Dizz
Matthew Garcia
Josh Brownstein
Christine Rickenbacher
andy
Colleen Monell
Tamara Burns
Angela Brown
Michael Tornabene
Trevor Smoldt
Kyle Weimer
Christopher Searcy
Alexis Baker
Daniel Westmoreland
Amy B
Tad Stemen
Christopher Moore
Jackson Gibbens
Robert George
Angela Skjeie
Mark Raiche
Tami Faulkner
Katelynn Renee
Mike Petersen
David Norton
Tim Holdford
Tricia Wear
Anne Lowery
Quietjbc
Kay Wolfe
RANDY KILLMAN
James Liddle
Christine Hickman
dmz011
Benjamin F.
Dan Krotz
John Fowler
john massey
Brett Drought
Greg deMena
Warren Cooper
Duane Pritchett
Kevin Collins
Mary Chaffin
KMMMAN
Paul
Shado
Ronald Luk
Dan Brockman
Fixit
John Crosthwait
Mike Palmer
Shelly Stokes
Michael Sheridan
DetailBear
b24chicago
Jeff
Matthew Bleen
cindy
Joe Hintzsche
John Cichon
Jason
Jamus
Chris Robinson
Brad Baker
Jeff Burdick
Will Robinson
Fridge56Vet
Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. Развлечения
Ceres is the largest asteroid in the belt, Calisto is a moon of Jupiter. Proxima Centauri is the nearest star to the sun. Arcturus and Vega are two of the brightest stars in the sky.
Ceres is the largest PLANET in the asteroid belt.
@@snowflakehunter Dwarf Planet. It’s its own classification.
@@SyntheticFrost Dwarf Planet is a subcategory of planet. It is not a category of its own If you want to get that technical, Jupiter is classified as a subcategory planet. It is a failed star attempt and is classified as a sub planet of the Gas Giant type.
@@snowflakehunter no dude nobody considers Eris, Pluto, Ceres, Haumea, or Makemake a planet.
@@DarrylErickson They are planet SUBCATEGORIES,
I don’t know about other people...but I am so much more enthusiastic to learn new things as an adult, than I was when I was younger...
Yep, same! I wonder if it's because in your youth you're forced to learn and now you WANT to. Imagine being a kid and learning something you care about.
@@Fat_Kids_Jiggle I believe it is because I have become somewhat of a “deep thinker...” My areas of interest have expanded...
I am a mom, grandma, a great-grandma and a great-great grandma... I want all of the people I love to be healthy and safe!! ❤️ x Infinity
It's because now when we learn new things, it's on what we choose to look at. Not what we're forced to.
I must've been a 'geek/nerd' ( which I am) to most people because I wanted to learn a bit of everything since I was little. I have close friends, but gaining them came naturally so it was not a priority. As I grew older it never changed (Partially from being an introvert that likes to look at deeper meanings in life, knowledge of the world, and beyond.) I've always loved science, and space is literally one of my favorite topics of discussion. "You're never too old to learn" is definitely a quote to live by.😌
Wait you got forced to learn about space bruh i did this just because i had free time and then fall in love with this stuff
The girl: someone has to be living on that.
Me: THAT'S A FUCKING STAR, YOU CAN'T LIVE ON A STAR
Se llama energia solar
"There's gotta be someone on there" *looking at a white hot ball of fire*
"Theres gotta be something on there"
Hun, that's a star. 😂
Very ignorant, or just naive/innocent?
Your local astronomy major here we go. If the sun was the size of a basketball, Neptune would be a pinhead a quarter mile away
Ceres is a dwarf planet between mars and Jupiter
Calisto is a moon of Jupiter
Any planet that says Kepler was discovered by the Kepler space telescope and it’s an exoplanet meaning it’s outside our solar system
Proxima Centuri is the closest Star to our solar system
Any Star that says A or B is a star in a binary system meaning it has a twin
The black you see are the largest black holes
The photo of the universe is the cosmic microwave background
If you look at the Orion constellation, the star to the top left of the belt is Betelgeuse.
Literally all of your former science teachers are weeping in shame. And no, people can not live on stars. lol Love you guys so much.
I know right. Geez 😂. However, I give y’all much credit for showing an interest and trying to learn. I promise, the more you get into it, the more amazed you will be.
That last one should be "The Observable Universe" because our telescopes can only see so far. In all actuality the universe could be endless
Another weird story is when you ask "how far away in the universe can we see?" and they go like "it depends on our technology", which can't be further from true. All we can see is what our physiology lets us see. We cannot perceive speeds larger than the speed of light, so that speed literally creates a "barrier" past of which we can not see in the standard way. Past that horizon there must still be universe, but in its original form, without it being processed by the human senses and brain. Past the cosmic horizon there are no planets stars or galaxies, there is only the universe of quantum phenomena.
having more interest in learning things as an adult, I've always enjoyed learning things. I just didnt care for doing the work, having deadlines or trying to quickly get through the basics of mass subjects in short periods of time. If i am interested in the subject i want to know i can focus time on it and learn more about it throughout a lifetime rather then just like a 4month class
The black round objects they were showing are black hole.
The Earth in the universe is like a grain of sand on the beach, maybe smaller!!! Also, Millie is so adorable!!!
If you mean earth compared to the observable universe, then earth is much much much much... much smaller than the beach. If you mean the universe as a whole, then the earth is potentially non-existent, as the universe could be infinite.
The Sun is actually called 'Sol'. That is why we live in the SOL-ar System. The system that rotates around the star called Sol. Technically, other star systems have their own names, but recently it has become acceptable to call them all solar systems... common usage of the term won out over literal accuracy. Likewise, as others have pointed out in the comments, our moon isn't the only one. Many, if not nearly all planets also have moons. Ours is called 'Luna', hence the LUNA-r Calendar, which tracks Earth's shadow passing over our moon. ^_^
Sol is Sun in Spanish too. LoL
Don't forget that people were thought to be made crazy by the light of the moon, hence LUNA-tics.... ;-)
you were right when you said we are just specs. people need to realize just how little we matter in the cosmic scheme of things.once they do maybe, just maybe, we can all find our own peace
Or maybe we matter more because there ain't much out there lol
@@aj897 and because we only matter on our planet, thus we matter a lot here.
Another thing that blows my mind is that many of what we see in the sky don't even exist anymore cuz it takes light so long to reach us.
You can actually see jupiter,venus,mars,mercury and saturn in the night as little dots just like stars 6:29 also after the sun all those flaming balls are stars not planets and those black things are black holes
ikr and people say americans are dumb
Except for bootes void, they kinda made it look just like a black hole but I don’t know how you would show a picture of the emptiest part of space lol
@@teamtaka7 by literally showing the light of the stars around it.. the same way we "see" black holes..
think of a pitch black shadow.. u only know its location because u'd see the light around it xD
Fun fact: betelgeuse can be seen in the night sky in the winter (northernhemisphere .i usually look for it in dec -feb). Its a bright star and actually has a red tint to it
Easy to find due to how recognizable Orion is; and when you find Betelgeuse, you can also see Bellatrix not far away from it (for Harry Potter fans).
recent analyses suggest that it might go supernova within this century
“Space is big. You just won't believe how vastly, hugely, mind-bogglingly big it is. I mean, you may think it's a long way down the road to the chemist's, but that's just peanuts to space.”
― Douglas Adams, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
You know since it seems like you guys might do a lot more space (and science) stuff how about I recommend to you "The Problem with Deep Space Travel" by Real Science which goes over some of the issues with... Deep Space Travel, There's not much more to say that doesn't spoil the entire premise of the video.
Trace a line from the handle of Big Dipper and Arcturus is the bright star. The Rhyme is Arc to Arcturus
Space is one of my strong topics, so here I go ig. The Universe that it's referring to is called the "Observable Universe". It's not the whole universe, but what we can physically observe in some way. Others like the first I believe was the smallest dwarf planet like object in the milkey way, correct me if I'm wrong. Forgot that thing existed tbh.
It was also an inaccurate depiction of the size of the universe as well. It should have gone into clusters and super clusters first.
We can't observe beyond 90 billion light years because light/information didn't reach us
You need to Google like Lav Luka does when you need answers to your questions about things during a reaction video.
I love it when he does that. He is a curious guy ain't he? It is fun to watch him get answer on the spot...actually asking the question then getting the answer.
James and Millie's heads exploding is HILARIOUS!!
You guys might like a channel called star Talk with Neil Degrasse Tyson. Astronomy, physics etc, but with some laughs to keep it interesting. Have a great day. 👍
We are not alone in the universe, we're never alone.
The likelihood of being alone in the universe is so low, that it's pretty much impossible.
Do British students take astronomy in high school? I was forced to learn all of this space stuff in 9th grade whether I wanted to or not.
It was an elective when I went to school in the early 2000s in California. But we learned about astronomy in basic science classes before that. Just not specific.
The thing that really blows my mind is that as ridiculously big as everything gets, you can go the OTHER way and things get ridiculously small. Weirdly, humans are almost bang in the middle between the biggest things in the Universe and the smallest. From a single atoms' perspective, a human being is comparative to the size of a Galaxy. And you can go even smaller than a single atom. WAY smaller. 99% of an atom is empty space, and if you increased the size of an atom to that of an apple, the electrons orbit would be out as far as our Moon.
Yeah. Have you seen the Power of Ten video? Fascinating stuff.
There is a great video called “the universe is bigger then you think” it is very very informative and you guys would love it!❤️
They've already reacted to it
@@ladrac198 oh I will look for that! Thank you!😁
light moves at 198,000 miles per second and it takes light 8 min to get from the sun to earth.
It's a star and you can see it, it's just so far away that it looks really tiny. And yes James you can see Jupiter from Earth lol.
Yeah that Jupiter thing kinda hurt lol. I can see four of it’s moons with regular ass binoculars
I still cant believe people dont know this, its common sense
I found this whole thing so endearing. Awesome relationship dynamic. There is so much to learn out there and the universe is so fantastical it breaks my own brain trying to wrap it into a little package I can understand. Lovely you put this one out there. There are NO STUPID QUESTIONS! Learning is fun.
They felt stupid to me. But as long as they don't ask it again after having learned what they did.
Arcturus is a star and is about 37 light years away from Earth, or about 346 trillion km.
You graduated from macdonolds
yay finally more British people on RUclips.
Arcturus is further away than a million times more distant than the Sun. It's actually 2.32 million times further away!
There are some great phone apps that will help you identify stars in the sky as well as look for events. The one I use is called Star Walk 2 and uses your phone's gps and compass to tell you what is in the sky around you and lets you search for stars and other objects yourself. It is a great tool for people who want to learn a little about the sky and it only costs a few bucks.
Lemmino has a 7 part "Top 10 Space Facts" series that would make good react videos. They're really interesting.
i think its time to react to james webb and what it caught on photo already. seriously we already found the most distant and oldest light source that is near the earth at 300 something billion years old. its amazing at what we can still find out there.
James Webb space telescope is going to amaze us all for the next decade or two. It's crazy what humans can build when we have a thirst for knowledge.
i love how shes like
OH WAIT SO A STAR THAT IS LARGER THAN OUR SOLAR SYSTEM ISNT IN OUR SOLAR SYSTEM !?!??
Maybe the Beezleys are too young to remember The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. Betelgeuse was the home solar system of both Ford Prefect and Zaphod Beeblebrox.
Also, in the movie Beetlejuice, the title characters name was supposed to be spelled Betelgeuse on the flyer that he leaft and Alec Baldwin first pronounced it incorrectly as Bay-tel-gyse (rymes with edelweiss.)
Some of these stars are in Alpha Centuri the closest galaxy to the sol system-basically us. and we know only a fraction of what's in that galaxy. heck we barely understand what other systems are out there. we keep looking hence why we learn.
No. Alpha Centauri is a star in our galaxy that's only a little over 4 light years from Earth. The closest galaxy to the Milky Way is Andromeda and it's over 2.5 million light years away. You're confusing solar systems with galaxies.
Guys, I really wouldn’t do more space stuff I were you.
“Space is big. You just won't believe how vastly, hugely, mind-bogglingly big it is. I mean, you may think it's a long way down the road to the chemist's, but that's just peanuts to space.”
🤣😂😁
Some context for these scales. Proxima Centauri is the closest star to the Sun. Its about 4 light years away (light year is a measure of how far light travels in a year). Using the FASTEST rocket we've ever created, it would take 50,000 years to reach Proxima Centauri.
UY Scuti is 5,219 light years away.
I feel like a lot people underestimate the size of the sun.
I never felt that way, but after seeing these two, I'm seriously worried about what kind of education people are receiving these days.
As a 40 year old man, I've stated for years now that I've learned far more after I finished with school than I ever did during all the years I went. My desire to learn new things now seems to be fueled by a curiosity that couldn't have given less of a fuck back when I was a kid.
I love her being like, there's got to be someone on there
That's a star 😆
Her IQ has got to be like 50 or something.
You probably can see "Arcturus", along with all the other dots in the night sky.
You can. It's one of the brightest stars in the sky
I think you want to learn more when you are grown up and not in school anymore because you aren't put in an environment where you HAVE to do it, and you can learn at your own will and pace without an external reason to do so, or without teachers nagging you around; no pressure
Hey guys, please continue with the space comparison/factual videos. I really enjoy seeing people's reactions to this kind of thing.
Is it because they make you feel like a genius?
A nebula is a giant cloud of dust and gas in space. Some nebulae (more than one nebula) come from the gas and dust thrown out by the explosion of a dying star, such as a supernova. Other nebulae are regions where new stars are beginning to form.
Arcturus is very easy to spot in the sky though. Unmistakably red.
4:16 🤣🤣. Classic. Can't avoid that joke.
When Arcturus comes up: "so that's not in our solar system then?"... 🤣
Don't feel stupid. When you were in school we didn't know as much about the Universe, and when I was in school back in the 1970's we knew even less. Of course, we are all learning this together. And isn't it amazing? None of this even considers the possibility of Multiverse Theory, and multiple Dimensions. We will be learning forever!
Betelguese star is now in dying stage and it is dimming very low and it could have been exploded but the light of explosion has not yet reached earth
7:04 😆 it's pronounced like Beetle-juice
most of the stars in the video r in our galaxy and u can see in naked eye mostly where there is clear star sky and u know the point where it is exist
With the new NASA telescopes and technology just launching, I'm more and more in awe of the vastness of the universe and galaxies even beyond the one we occupy! And this ongoing learning keeps us humble and in awe 🙌🏼
The girl Is the type of person Who would believe me if i said that we rotate around the Moon, She really said things like "how can i see the sun but i cant see arcturus" some people should have never passed the maturity test
i think its mainly space isnt taught nearly enough at school, a person in my class thought the moon was bigger than the sun
@@dylaroy1519They thought WHAT?
of course it can't be in the solar system , it's massive, you would be able to see it, plus the gravitational pull on that one would destroy the solar system if it didn't simply by it's massive size.
Definitely check out the James Webb Space Telescope pictures. It takes images at least infinitely better than Hubble
You can see Betelgeuse with the naked eye. It is in the constellation of Orion. The top left red looking star . It 56million light years away and it it in the process of going super nova.
That last is the observable universe. There is still more that is so far away we will never see it even if we lived forever.
Mind blown
After the sun everything is not our solar system anymore but still in our milky way
As others have said, you can absolutely see Vega, and Arcturus. I often use Vega to get my bearings when trying to locate other objects. Sirius A is about 8.6 light years from Earth, and is another one of the brightest stars. And for UY Scuti, that was 2.4 billion km, not million. Just that star has a diameter that is about 7 times the distance from the Earth to the Sun.
Oh bless their hearts lol (but why can I see the sun) love you guys from Georgia
Yeah the craziest part about wrapping your head around space is everything that we can see and take a picture of is what was we're seeing the past the burnt out past giant dying Stars
The black spaces with names are registered black holes that they calculated the size of.
something u might find interesting, humans are closer in size comparison to the largest objects in the universe (Hercules-Corona Borealis Great Wall - 10 billion light years from 1 end to the other), than we are compared to the smallest objects (a quark - 43 billion-billionths of a centimetre)
when I was kid I was so interested in almost every science or literature classes :) I was like a mature woman in a kids class. In the other hand I sucked at Gymnastics class and maths. I still tried to get at least the minimum grades to pass. I guess I understand that most of you felt the opposite, im glad you can apreciate knowlege, it doesnt matter if you do now yo are older, the thing is, enjoy learning!
Each star has a name. Ours is call the Sun
"Proxima Centauri" is a star, just like "The Sun", but it isn't our star.
Skip Intro: 2:15
"10,000 Light Years from Home." : Rolling Stones
That last picture, The Universe, that is the observable universe. That is only what we can see with our current technology.
I don't know if technology really limits how much we can see. The light just hasn't reached us. Perhaps there will be some way to discover the rest of the universe with new technological advancements, but I don't see how other than physically going further into space.
Yes, the James Webb Space Telescope is showing us very cool pics, and it is just getting started.
Check out videos on Starship being built at Starbase, TX. As a teacher there's a good chance one of your students will one day board one to move to Mars.
the ones that were coming after the sun are actually stars and the arcturus is still in our milky way
You can see Arcturus. It is the primary star of the constellation Bootes. Go out at night and take a look.
Those big things are stars, the things we see in the sky everynight lol lol lol
lol....good job pointing out that nobody can live on Betelguese... since its a star
I watch these all the time I love it, and the black things after the suns are the largest black holes we know of, but still loving the content keep it up.
The stars are amazingly big and most are very far away. The nearest star to the Earth (excluding the Sun) is Centari at 4.4 light years away or 40 TRILLION kilometers from Earth. That's the NEAREST star to our sun. These stretches of space are immense.
Proxima Centauri is our next door neighbor. The closest Star to our solar system.
@The Beesleys For reference, 1 lightyear (or LY for short) is the distance that light travels in 1 year. So, a pulse of light takes three years to go from one end of the Helix Nebula to the other.
Those two blank spots (TON 618 for example) are black holes. We can not directly observe them as the gravity is so massive that you have to travel faster than lightspeed (299,792,458 meters per second) to escape. As light can't travel faster than that, it gets sucked in. Then physics as we know it simply gives up as the math (as I have come to understand it) requires us to be able to divide by zero to understand.
those other giant stars there are just stars in the night sky, and the ones they show here are all in the milky way
Ahh Uranus, the butt of all elementary school to elderly age jokes.
Yeah all the planets are not just in our solar system but the universe in general lol.
I thought people knew basic facts about space, I was wrong. Moon bigger than Earth omg.
"Solar system" refers to a system of planets that orbits a star (our star [the sun] is called "Sol"), so there are no other stars in our system. All the other stars you see have their own "solar systems" filled with planets.
You guys should reacted to how big the universe is.
Yes, more space!
I'm amazed at Millie's lack of space knowledge. Yet I'm not surprised because we have flat earthers. My bet is that many of them have a similar knowledge base
Science is hard for me too though. I thought it was only 8 planets. Pfft
If you want more space stuff, look up Anton Petrov or Scott Manley on youtube. Two of the more knowledgable people on the platform.
most of these stars are in our galaxy,some are light years away from us,there are different types of stars, from our own yellow sun,to red giants like betelegeus. and white hyper giants all the way down to red and brown dwarf stars,where you are is idea for some night time observing
Matter how old you get, jokes about Uranus will never not be funny
like gets, then 150 billion years, that's a lot of years to wait
Reminder: 1 light year = six trillion miles. That's 6,000,000,000,000.
The big ones are stars, so you might be able to see them.
The Beesleys are the bees knees.