Why Does NASA Pay CalTech $2,827,348,527 Every Year?
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 2 июн 2024
- It's not surprising to see space companies like Blue Origin, SpaceX, and Lockheed Martin near the top of NASA's payout list. However, the largest benefactor is none of those companies, but actually the California Institute of Technology or CalTech. Every year, CalTech receives nearly $3 billion in funding for operating the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. The Jet Propulsion Laboratory or JPL are the people behind all of the Mars rovers, the Voyager missions, and the Viking missions. In fact, JPL actually outdates NASA themselves. JPL was originally started way back in October of 1936 when Professor Von Karman and a group of graduate students decided to experiment with some rocket engines. Originally, they worked with the US Army and provided them with jet propulsion technology and missile guidance technology. Eventually though, after NASA was established, JPL basically became a subsidiary of NASA. This video describes the history of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory run by CalTech and why JPL gets paid billions every single year.
Earn Interest From The Government & Top Corporations:
(iOS App for US Residents)
www.silomarkets.com/waiting-l...
Free Weekly Newsletter With Insiders:
logicallyanswered.substack.com/
Socials:
/ hariharan.jayakumar
Discord Community:
/ discord
Timestamps:
0:00 - Massive CalTech Funding
0:55 - Rocket Development
3:21 - Jet Propulsion Laboratory
5:10 - Partnership With NASA
7:05 - Survival Crisis
7:51 - JPL Today
Thumbnail Credit:
go.nasa.gov/2RvPCEB
Resources:
pastebin.com/hiQGaeR9
Disclaimer:
This video is not a solicitation or personal financial advice. All investing involves risk. Please do your own research.
www.silomarkets.com/disclosures - Наука
I learned something new today. I thought JPL was a stand-alone company. The US obviously needs to keep funding this tech giant!
Me too haha!
Good grief - every newspaper boy in the nation knows that JPL is a national institution and no private company ! ! !
@@best_pilot i didnt
So basically, Cal tech is NASA's R&D company
It’s the only part of NASA that is out of NASA’s control - and the only part that isn’t crippled by waste and bureaucracy.
SpaceX has begun to operate as a de facto second tech center for NASA.
Why not just close the other parts of NASA down and either save that money or give it to JPL and SpaceX?
@@peterfireflylund I actually think that SpaceX is better than NASA but idk tbh
Its Caltech okay?
Not Cal tech
The interesting thing about JPL is that almost every project they do, is a R&D project. They propose projects that have never been do before to NASA and if selected, they get to design, build, test and operate the missions. A very interesting place to work!!
This is a really detailed video with a super specific title
You’re right!
just as oddly specific as the amount nasa is gonna pay spacex for developing a moon lander : p
@@slopedarmor I know right
@@LogicallyAnswered very hooking title. I love the details. Very interesting
Actually Theodor Karman (Kármán Tódor) was a hungarian born scientist. The HQ of JPL is called Von Karman building and the theoretical boundry of space, the 100km line above earth also named after him (Karman line).
Seeing your editing and content I sometimes wonder about your subscription number.
Good luck for future endeavours ❤️
Thank you!
Great video as always.
Great information. I'd just like to add that the Voyager probes were launched on a strict time frame to take advantage of the once in every 175 year planetary alignment that allowed these craft to visit all the solar system planets beyond earth in a single mission. They really were a remarkable achievement that taught us so much about our planets, most especially those beyond Saturn, which to this day, lie largely out of our reach for direct visitation due to the huge distances involved.
I did not know that . Makes sense when you think about it
A tour of the JPL in Pasadena, CA is one of the hardest tickets to secure in So Cal due to intense public interest. You must book well in advance and no walk ups are taken in. Now with the Mars helicopter more interest will lead to longer waits to enter JPL. 😿
I was fortunate to field trip thrice at JPL
@@Apocalymon - Your so lucky which probably makes you feel more kindred spirit with the JPL staff with their sensational space successes.
I got a tour of it just a month or two before Curiosity landed. As a nerdy 14 year old it was very very cool and helped push me toward engineering.
It almost easier to get into JPL to do a Ph.D. than to book a tour. 😉
@@baomao7243 - good point but now I’m more determined to score a tour of the JPL! 🤣
Great video and very interesting topic!
Thank you sir!
JPL is why the Mars missions are possible.
Don't ever change, love the videos
Thanks Ryan!
Very nice detailing ✌🏼😉
Thanks man!
Super video man..
A very specific topic for a specific video
JPL is for sure Underrated and Underfunded!
Very interesting!
That title made my head spin. No rounding numbers, huh?
Hahaha
I hope to someday get accepted into a JPL internship. I applied this Summer, but no reply.
Good luck!
How could I only with general knowledge collaborate on your projects without specific knowledge?
Long live Jack Parsons the original founder of JPL, (Jack Parson Lab). You should do a video on him.
He was the original boomer.
From a small local experiment to become a fuel in space exploration.
I didn’t know the origins of NASA were in California as well.
Very specific title
It sure is!
Can u please cover the alibaba and Chinese government topic please it's really important because people outside of China need to know what was the problem with ant ipo and why was alibaba fined so that people can know about china and it's policies on tech companies.
I’ll need to look into that
Exactly as I thought. TL;DR - NASA also funds JPL.
Didn't get the names of the three future missions, JPL is working on. Would have been nice to mention what they do. Interesting facts otherwise.
Thanks for the feedback!
For future missions, check their website at: jpl.nasa.gov
Even before this video, I knew that JPL has single-handedly explored the solar system, and observed large chunks of tbe visible universe. So, yeah...
Where did you got that Ingenuity had taken off hahaha. It just got deployed, it has not flown yet.
Hahaha, when I said that the Mars helicopter has taken flight, I meant it launched. I can see how the visualization makes that confusing though.
No no no, he's a time traveler. Nice to know that the flight went well!
@@LogicallyAnswered you sound like you know nothing
@@LogicallyAnswered its ok! Great video tho. I have been waiting so long for it to fly. I cant wait!
@@silviobertonati8497it has flown now. I think the livestream where NASA talks about it starts in 10 minutes
If you want to know how JPL really started, read “Sex and Rockets” about Jack Parsons.
8:17 looks like the rocket exploded
Hahaha
Is JPL a separate company (owned my Cal Tec) or a nasa department?
It’s a nasa department that is operated by CalTech.
Technically, it's an FFRDC: en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federally_funded_research_and_development_centers
So JPL is part of CalTech?
Yes, JPL is part of CalTech.
It is because of Eng. Howard Wolowitz.
So, NASA pays CalTech and CalTech operates JPL, cause the government cut JPL out of their budget. Am I right?
It’s a FFRDC.
If i am not mistaken ingenuity hasn't flown yet
It has not. I meant it launched from earth when I said it has taken flight. Sorry for the confusing wording.
@@LogicallyAnswered dude , i love your channel, i watch every of your video. Thank you , for great content
they launch satelite before nasa did
Can you make a video on reaching space without rockets😆😆😆😆😉😉😂😃
That actually sounds super interesting!
Where did you get the exact number of money😂😮🧐🧐🧐
Usaspending.gov
Hi bro
Hello Prashant!
I assume that is computer voice. Though the content is good. The occasional gross mispronunciation is disconcerting. The often unrelated or misplaced video to subject is also unprofessional. You need better editors. I might add Cal Tech is a small university (2,300 students compared with MIT's 11,500) that is not noted for their football teams. Cal Tech has the highest average SAT/ACT scores of any US university and by inference the smartest student body.
Not a computer voice bro. Thanks for the feedback though.
English pronunciation is weird. I’d be proud if English weren’t my first language and I made so few mistakes in pronunciation...
I like to believe there is a parallel universe out there where Woyager-1 and Woyager-2 are a thing.
Due to privacy
Um ok
@@LogicallyAnswered no its jpl i was wrong
Still remember me?
Yes sir!
3:03 - I don't think holding the flag upside down is a good sign...
Mariner is pronounced like "Mare-in-'er"
Definitely not Marine-r
plz
Spoken like maritime or marinade but not like marine. English be weird like that.
I think you explained less than you realise.
Ingenuity did not fly yet.
You’re right. I meant it launched from earth when I said it has taken flight. Sorry for the confusing wording.
@@LogicallyAnswered That make's a lot more sense thanks for clearing it up❤
$2,827,348,527 ---- WHY is it 27? Why the twenty-seven dollars at the end? Is there some special reason for that? Why not just $2,827,000,000?
Dang, JPL is expensive
But is producing excellent results !
But you need to remember, almost every project that JPL produces has never been done and expands the bounds of human knowledge. How do you place a price tag on that?
@@brian6421 Contract out the engineering to SpaceX. Only do the science and operation.
Y are u always serious 👁️👃👁️
Serious topics require serious demeanor haha
@@LogicallyAnswered 🦸🦸
@@LogicallyAnswered pls try out different narration styles it would seriously affect ur subscriptions
Here at 60k see y'all at a million
*Caltech
s p a c e
👍
Big chungus moneys
Yep!
NASA you are so
It’s not a prime number
Hahaha
why didnt you explain what caltec does?im nearly at 2 minutes and you're mentioning einstein but I have no idea what they are. bored, now , bye
Almost all the sexy stuff NASA does that works… is from JPL. The entire video is a list of things JPL made.
Why does SpaceX pay logically answered 2,528,621 dollars annually
That would be awesome hahaha
Down voted - upside down flag is UNSAT
In Musk we trust! Hail to the Technoking!!!
First
First hahaha
Thanks for watching sir!
Lol the helicopter hasn't even taken off yet.... that's a straight lie and you just lost a subscriber
Alright man. I meant that it had launched when I said it took flight. I can see how the visualization would be confusing though.
indian accent
Technocracy and astral colonialism. What a shame
Ok give the money to jpl not cal-tech then
its none of our business..............
Afraid to mention Russian Rockets & Satellites and many first until Apollo. Anyways, perhaps you don't know.
Why learn/teach actual history.
wwoe-ya-dger?? It's /v/-o-ya-djer