M73 - Is it really an "object"? - Deep Sky Videos

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  • Опубликовано: 11 дек 2024
  • Messier 73 (aka NGC 6994) has been the cause of confusion and disagreement, as Dr Becky Smethurst explains.
    More links and info below ↓ ↓ ↓
    Patreon: / deepskyvideos
    More Messier Objects: bit.ly/MessierO...
    Dr Smethurst is the Sixty Symbols Ogden Fellow at the University of Nottingham.
    Papers mentioned in the video include:
    The clashing 2000 papers...
    arxiv.org/abs/...
    arxiv.org/abs/...
    The deciding 2002 paper...
    www.aanda.org/...
    Deep Sky Videos website: www.deepskyvide...
    Twitter: / deepskyvideos
    Facebook: / deepskyvideos
    More about the astronomers in our videos: www.deepskyvide...
    Support us on Patreon: / deepskyvideos
    Made possible by:
    The University of Nottingham
    and The University of Sheffield.
    Video by Brady Haran

Комментарии • 135

  • @Oldfaithful61
    @Oldfaithful61 7 лет назад +221

    Not boring at all, quite the contrary. This video clearly shows us how carefully we should study data and the various conclusions drawn from those data.

    • @ZeedijkMike
      @ZeedijkMike 7 лет назад +7

      Totally agree. Or as Stephen Fry/Sandy Toksvig would say. Quite Interesting.

    • @Indianif
      @Indianif 7 лет назад +4

      Quite interesting indeed

    • @PhilippeChretienBasbrun
      @PhilippeChretienBasbrun 7 лет назад +2

      Excellent video for an absolutely boring object! Thanks!

    • @GnosticAtheist
      @GnosticAtheist 7 лет назад

      There are no other standing theories to explain the data.

    • @ottolehikoinen6193
      @ottolehikoinen6193 7 лет назад

      Yes, not boring. Are there catalogues of these asterisms?

  • @Orlin3
    @Orlin3 7 лет назад +6

    I love having Dr. Smethurst on the video rotation. She's an amazing addition. Keep up the great work!

  • @TaohRihze
    @TaohRihze 7 лет назад +155

    You could do them in order, but you selected a more Messier approach.

    • @BhupinderSinghSaini1
      @BhupinderSinghSaini1 7 лет назад +19

      Yeah, but the videos are just so nebulous, I am okay with this approach

    • @livintolearn7053
      @livintolearn7053 7 лет назад +4

      "Messier approach"...that's it, Im leaving!

    • @PhilBoswell
      @PhilBoswell 7 лет назад

      Please accept this congratulatory virtual custard pie to the face…you know that you deserve it ;-)

    • @debkalpapal2682
      @debkalpapal2682 4 года назад

      @@livintolearn7053 lol

  • @jollz4u
    @jollz4u 7 лет назад +29

    Reminds me of Feynman's quote: "The first principle is that you must not fool yourself-and you are the easiest person to fool."

  • @PeacefulAnxiety
    @PeacefulAnxiety 7 лет назад +75

    Dr Smethurst is an excellent addition to deep sky videos and sixty symbols! It would be awesome if she did a video on galaxy formation.

    • @dordokamaisu2966
      @dordokamaisu2966 7 лет назад +5

      Agree! But I would also listen to Mike Merrifield 24/7!

    • @glennac
      @glennac 7 лет назад +7

      And she’s super cute too! 😉

  • @guyh3403
    @guyh3403 7 лет назад +2

    Absolutely FAR from boring. I could watch this for hours.
    Thank you!

  • @evileye1968
    @evileye1968 6 лет назад +2

    Not boring, it explains how the dispute was finally settled using relative velocity. Thanks for the video.

  • @draketungsten74
    @draketungsten74 7 лет назад +51

    I actually found this to be one of the more interesting videos on clusters.

    • @unvergebeneid
      @unvergebeneid 7 лет назад +6

      Only that it's not a video on a cluster ;) But yeah, it was really interesting!

  • @wabznasm9660
    @wabznasm9660 7 лет назад

    Brady, thank you so much for this channel and your others, they're all absolutely fantastic. DeepSkyVideos in particular is an absolute dream come true for me. I've spent many hours poring over dry wikipedia articles about Messier objects and then lo and behold, someone's made a peerless video series about them. God knows what's in the water in Nottingham but the folks you interview are some of the most engaging and entertaining educators I've ever known. Your videos radiate human warmth, and it's in no small part due to your editing and interview styles. Thanks again.

  • @drmoynihan
    @drmoynihan 7 лет назад +1

    Dr Smethurst,
    Thank you for this excellent presentation. As one who received his "Messier Certificate" over 20 years ago, I remember well the consternation around M73. :)

  • @bobcunningham6953
    @bobcunningham6953 7 лет назад +2

    We normally get who, what and when on these videos. It's is also great to also get why and how, to describe the process through time.

  • @skinnyjohnsen
    @skinnyjohnsen 7 лет назад +1

    I really liked this video, and I am happy to hear that conclusion!

  • @zanshibumi
    @zanshibumi 7 лет назад +1

    This is a fascinating story! So much information about how these things are being thought about.

  • @lindaisenegger163
    @lindaisenegger163 5 лет назад +1

    What would be cool and really rattle comfort zones...you should start a Debunked Boring Science series...entitled DBS...I personally would luv it...cool arguments just hanging on to history :)

  • @RonJohn63
    @RonJohn63 6 лет назад +1

    M73 is *not* boring. The "humanness" (confirmation bias, different people interpreting the same data in different ways, etc) involved in researching it makes it interesting.

  • @neilwilson5785
    @neilwilson5785 7 лет назад +1

    Excellent. I am learning new things.

  • @av-ji9qy
    @av-ji9qy 4 года назад

    Hi Dr Becky
    Excellent video.....just a beginner looking at the stars......truthfully
    to me everything looks the same......keep us informed I watch you other videos
    also

  • @michael.a.covington
    @michael.a.covington 3 года назад +1

    What Messier and the Herschels did was preserve identifiabilty. If a new catalogue is to supersede an old one, it should contain all the objects in the old one even if some of them have been shown not to belong, simply so that they can still be identified. Messier did this with M40, which he knew was a double star, but someone earlier had reported it as nebulous. He himself said that he wanted to include objects that had been previously claimed to be nebulous, even if they really weren't, for the sake of identification.

  • @derschmiddie
    @derschmiddie 7 лет назад +18

    It is traditionally associated with chess board makers, sellers of onions, manufacturers of plaster images of small religious significance and people allergic to pewter. Also Rincewinds birth-sign.

    • @garethdean6382
      @garethdean6382 7 лет назад +4

      Sadly, due to being dismissed he has now not officially ever been born. This may cause some problems.

    • @mal2ksc
      @mal2ksc 7 лет назад

      Would those be all onions including yellow, or just white onions, which you couldn't get because of the war?

  • @gumunduringigumundsson9344
    @gumunduringigumundsson9344 7 лет назад +3

    Yeees!! My all time faveourite channel strikes again ✅✅✅✅🍀🎩🎆😃

  • @originaljuan
    @originaljuan 5 лет назад +1

    I didn't think it was boring; it embodied everything that science is! it took three hundred years to confirm that it wasn't anything! that's the beauty of science! in any other human field of knowledge, not just theology but law and philosophy and a bunch of other stuff, the attitude at the end of a "project" is 'I better come up with something definitive, then I'll get my fame and it'll be settled and that'll be that!', whereas in science, its all about the actual truth, over your fame and over having it be settled and moving on. in science, the attitude is always 'I can't make a definitive positive statement about this, so I better pass the question along so that it gets solved one day, because if I make something up, sure I may become famous, but it'll be easy to show that I made the answer up and the ridicule will be even worse, and the question will still go unanswered!'

  • @1mctous
    @1mctous 6 лет назад

    I noticed that Herschel's catalog had elements in the right hand column, presumably from the absorption lines they could discern in the spectra. How ironic that this disproved their proximity.

  • @nathancoulombe6313
    @nathancoulombe6313 7 лет назад +3

    One Shift
    Two Shift
    Red Shift
    Blue Shift

  • @mokopa
    @mokopa 7 лет назад +1

    In a way this video is one of the more interesting of the series. Boring is interesting when interesting gets boring.

  • @WiredUp4Fun
    @WiredUp4Fun 7 лет назад +1

    Radio podcast trophy from Mr & Mrs Grey at the end there 👑🎉 congrats on winning the trophy Brady

  • @morbid1.
    @morbid1. 7 лет назад +2

    I see famous microphone, well deserved trophy :D

  • @flamencoprof
    @flamencoprof 7 лет назад +13

    Science: - Not the "right" answer, just the best answer we have SO FAR!
    Scientist: - "I have proven this!"
    Interesting post showing how the two can differ.
    Many "facts" I was taught at school in the 50's and 60"s have been revised, but that doesn't deter me from preferring to follow the scientific method.

  • @treeboy83
    @treeboy83 7 лет назад +1

    even when its boring, it isnt, i learnt about how scientists can keep things going even when its not there just because somebody else saw it, i know thats probably gone away alot but good to see how it used to be

  • @logicalfundy
    @logicalfundy 7 лет назад +1

    Maybe it's just me, but solving a long standing mystery isn't boring.

  • @ragnkja
    @ragnkja 7 лет назад +2

    Messier's catalogue was just a list of things he'd checked that turned out to not be comets, so it makes sense that he'd include it while John Herschel wouldn't include it in a catalogue of nebulae.

  • @vanhouten64
    @vanhouten64 6 лет назад +1

    I like M73. Interesting little object and easy to find near M72.

  • @philorkill
    @philorkill 7 лет назад +1

    This. is. GREAT!

  • @sansamman4619
    @sansamman4619 7 лет назад

    you shouldn't have said it's boring now I feel like a numberphile nerd because I enjoyed it so much!

  • @tomcan48
    @tomcan48 5 лет назад

    *M73 is a Small server by Lenovo configured with i3, i5 and i7 processors. With an i7 processor, it will really light up!*

  • @sirenbrian
    @sirenbrian 7 лет назад

    I'm curious why the teams used the first method at all, checking the colors, instead of the speeds. Is one method usually easier/better than the other? Did they have a particular reason for choosing that method first?

  • @Adamas97
    @Adamas97 7 лет назад

    I wish this channel would post move videos. They are always so well done and interesting. I also miss seeing all the people in them. What is happening with everyone? How is there own research going? Have they published any papers lately?

  • @SaccoBelmonte
    @SaccoBelmonte 7 лет назад

    What do you guys think about this whole Thorium reactor thing? That'd make a great video.

  • @pifdemestre7066
    @pifdemestre7066 7 лет назад +5

    What is a reasonable speed ?
    for example the earth has an orbital velocity of about 29km/s and Mercury has an orbital velocity of up to 59 km/s
    so if looked at the right time from the right position we could imagine seeing one at +59km/s and the other at -29km/s.
    Of course those stars are much further from each other, so probably the expected velocity should be slower. But what would be a reasonable value?

    • @michaelsommers2356
      @michaelsommers2356 7 лет назад

      The "problem" here is not with the velocities per se, but with the fact that the stars have very different velocities. The differences are too great for the stars to be part of a bound system. Note that the 2002 paper also looked at distances and spectra, and found that all the data are inconsistent with the stars being part of the same system.

    • @pifdemestre7066
      @pifdemestre7066 7 лет назад +1

      @Michael Sommer,
      that is exactly my point, someone could see a difference of velocity between earth and Mercury of 88km/s
      which is comparable to what is seen in this cluster. Of course Mercury is much closer to the sun than those stars are from each other. On the other hands the total mass of those stars is bigger than the sun (I guess it does not compensate for the distance, but you need to do the computations).

    • @michaelsommers2356
      @michaelsommers2356 7 лет назад

      The Earth and Mercury are not stars in an open cluster; they will have different kinematics. Also, as I said before, the 2002 paper also looked at distances and compositions, which showed definitively that these stars are not associated with each other.

    • @yz4901983
      @yz4901983 7 лет назад

      Albert says its all relative

  • @bertiewooster4043
    @bertiewooster4043 7 лет назад +2

    Boring? I learned something new so how can that be boring?

  • @Tara_Li
    @Tara_Li 7 лет назад

    To be fair - when they were displaying the the star field, I *thought* I did see some nebulosity around the lowest of the four stars - @1m10s and @2m00s - pretty circular, so my first thought was lens effect, but then it looked off-center, so I wondered...

  • @zubmit700
    @zubmit700 7 лет назад +2

    Do we know of any star(s) in the milky way that have zero velocity relative to the sun? Like you and another car with the same speed, x m from each other and if you remove all reference point it looks like both are stationary?

    • @garethdean6382
      @garethdean6382 7 лет назад

      I don't think so, which is sort of expected. Only stars at our sun's distance from the galactic center would be expected to have the same orbital speed and even that neglects things like the spiral arms. Anything else would be a temporary coincidence. (Exactly zero, moving slowly relative to the sun is more likely.) It's possible there are some stationary relative to the sun but I've not seen any in the literature.

  • @Darxide23
    @Darxide23 7 лет назад +21

    Astrophysics Kirsten Dunst

  • @garethdean6382
    @garethdean6382 7 лет назад

    The same object, the same data, but crucially there was a human choice made as to 'these stars are part of it'. Even the slightest bit of subjectivity so easily alters results.

    • @michaelsommers2356
      @michaelsommers2356 7 лет назад

      Are you sure about "the same data"? I haven't read all three papers, but I'm pretty sure the 2002 paper had data unavailable to the others.

  • @michaelsommers2356
    @michaelsommers2356 7 лет назад +1

    Here is the 2002 paper on arxiv.org: arxiv.org/pdf/astro-ph/0111601.pdf

  • @aakksshhaayy
    @aakksshhaayy 7 лет назад +2

    My favourite messier object is the Andromeda galaxy

  • @littlebigphil
    @littlebigphil 7 лет назад

    I imagine there's a statistical analysis which could give a number to how closely they follow the pattern.

  • @solank7620
    @solank7620 7 лет назад +1

    But wait. Can't stars in an open cluster have different velocities and directions...?
    If stars have different velocities, does that actually imply they aren't in an open cluster? I'm not an astronomer obviously - why can't stars in the same open cluster have different velocities, and be headed in different directions?

    • @michaelsommers2356
      @michaelsommers2356 7 лет назад +1

      Stars in an open cluster will have different velocities (note that velocity includes both speed and direction), but since the cluster is a bound system, the velocities will be similar. The Odenkirchen and Soubiran paper found the dispersal in velocities to be very high, too high for the stars to be a bound system.
      Note that they also looked at distances and spectra, all of which strongly suggested that the stars are not related to each other.

  • @debbie74dj
    @debbie74dj 5 лет назад

    Could you do a video about Tabby's star, please ?

  • @davidmurphy563
    @davidmurphy563 7 лет назад +1

    Small point. I think it is fairer to label what happened cognitive dissonance rather than confirmation bias. Although I'm probably splitting hairs.

  • @pugnation
    @pugnation 4 года назад

    So, If it is debunked now, will it be removed from the catalogues? Not boring at all!

  • @kevinfrederick8999
    @kevinfrederick8999 7 лет назад

    The spikes on the stars are from the telescope . I have made a design that does not have those defects my largest has a 20 inch primary mirror Thanks for the clips

  • @guest_informant
    @guest_informant 7 лет назад +1

    I don't think she's (necessarily) describing confirmation bias, *I think she's describing peer pressure* The story of M73 is more like _The Emperor's New Clothes_ where everyone agrees and no-one dare disagree. That's peer pressure, isn't it?
    In confirmation bias you have a preconceived outcome, you seek confirmation and ignore counterexample. In this case they were (ostensibly) neutral which means there was no preconceived outcome* about what they were going to find they, but then they agreed with what everyone else had said.
    There are technicalities, and this is a youtube comment but I think that's right. I'm saying *Peer Pressure not Confirmation Bias*
    PS I wonder if peer pressure will lead to everyone saying: Don't be daft, that was confirmation bias :-)
    *Sort of

  • @Mekratrig
    @Mekratrig 7 лет назад

    If it's not a real cluster, why can't it be dropped from the catalog?

  • @erictaylor5462
    @erictaylor5462 5 лет назад

    Wasn't the Messier Catalog created to provide a list of objects that are not comets? Perhaps M73 was include because it was mistaken for a comet.

    • @LardGreystoke
      @LardGreystoke 3 года назад

      True. But subsequent lists had a different objective. "M73" didn't qualify.

  • @anernits
    @anernits 7 лет назад +1

    that microphone, thou...

  • @NeonsStyleHD
    @NeonsStyleHD 7 лет назад

    Stupid question. Isn't it possible that Messier did see nebula, but it has been dissipated since then?

    • @maxratzlaff8333
      @maxratzlaff8333 7 лет назад

      NeonsStyle considering in astronomical terms a short time span is hundreds of millions of years....no

    • @LardGreystoke
      @LardGreystoke 3 года назад

      His telescopes, by today's standards, were not that great.

  • @hyfy-tr2jy
    @hyfy-tr2jy 7 лет назад +8

    is it just me or does this university have some of the hottest female scientists?

    • @shakesmctremens178
      @shakesmctremens178 7 лет назад

      inorite

    • @chooseyouhandle
      @chooseyouhandle 7 лет назад +1

      it's an illusion, their intelligence makes them seem hotter than they really are

    • @strangersound
      @strangersound 7 лет назад +5

      Intelligence is extremely sexy and that's no illusion. ;)

    • @dougieh9676
      @dougieh9676 5 лет назад

      Not just you. She’s smart and eye candy too. ♥️😍❤️

  • @brettkuntze8997
    @brettkuntze8997 7 лет назад

    I thin the best time to view Orion Nebula is 3-4 am just ahead of the rising sun . The nebula looks so fresh right out of the oven! August is the month ..

  • @AVMamfortas
    @AVMamfortas 5 лет назад

    The science is settled.

  • @supahfly_uk
    @supahfly_uk 7 лет назад

    You named it after a motorway nice

  • @auto_ego
    @auto_ego 6 лет назад

    Dr. Becky really flares my corona.

  • @BryanSeigneur0
    @BryanSeigneur0 5 лет назад

    "Miles apart." No. "Millions of miles." Still no. LOL

  • @Nerzgul
    @Nerzgul 7 лет назад

    So it means that bias it's open to interpretation and it's subjective in this case, just to underline.

  • @WillPittenger
    @WillPittenger 5 лет назад

    Why don't they compare the distances to each of the stars? There's only 7 to compare.

  • @hugoise367
    @hugoise367 7 лет назад

    The speed diferences might be telling us that some sort of explosion would have happened in between them, and so they are expanding away from it in all directions, some toward us, some to the opposite direction, and others sideways. Not saying this is a definite fact, just pointing out the endless plausible causes one could come up with to explain the observations. That said, we should not be rushing into conclusions without openly considering, debating, and rethinking our ideas together, and not individually in a competitive way, just to,prove a point. The only thing we will be is proven wrong sooner or later. That's just waste of theme, resources, opportunities, and especially it puts fellow researchers fighting each other in a useless war, instead of working harmoniously for the sake of knowledge.

    • @JeSuisUnKikoolol
      @JeSuisUnKikoolol 7 лет назад +1

      That's not how explosions work in space, at least to my knowledge

    • @michaelsommers2356
      @michaelsommers2356 7 лет назад

      The 2002 paper also looked at distances and compositions of the stars, and found that there was no reason so think they were ever part of a single system.

  • @MrCHINBAG
    @MrCHINBAG 7 лет назад

    Subbed

  • @KattarJ
    @KattarJ 7 лет назад

    So Hubble couldn't be of any help?

    • @LardGreystoke
      @LardGreystoke 3 года назад

      Hubble has far more important things to do.

  • @davidtickner80
    @davidtickner80 7 лет назад +1

    Astronomy boring? Perish the thought.

  • @jwarmstrong
    @jwarmstrong 5 лет назад

    On the first date you explain Messier 73 and they don't run from the table - luck is on your side...

  • @floodychild
    @floodychild 7 лет назад

    She reminds me of Kirsten Dunst.

  • @jerrygundecker743
    @jerrygundecker743 6 лет назад +1

    Much ado about, well, let’s call it a lot of gas.

  • @ImSidgr
    @ImSidgr 7 лет назад

    Brady's dad hat 😂

  • @jetzeschaafsma1211
    @jetzeschaafsma1211 7 лет назад +1

    That's not what confirmation bias is, though.

  • @LardGreystoke
    @LardGreystoke 3 года назад

    The stars didn't know each other from atom.

  • @multiverse2301
    @multiverse2301 7 лет назад

    If anyone know more about stars space or deep space universe then please contact me we will discuss about daily basis im dam crazy exiting to know about universe ... thanks

  • @jefflucas_life
    @jefflucas_life 7 лет назад +1

    I say yes, its a small cluster of stars.

  • @akilghosh
    @akilghosh 7 лет назад

    Dr. Becky Smethurst seemed to be so excited in her first video, well now stuffs are turning out to be boring for her.. Hmmmm

  • @ottolehikoinen6193
    @ottolehikoinen6193 6 лет назад

    Add Caldwell objects

  • @chrissscottt
    @chrissscottt 7 лет назад

    The method was clearly flawed.

  • @mickeypopa
    @mickeypopa 7 лет назад +1

    She had me at m-m-m-m-millions of miles! 😃

  • @mightyfinejonboy
    @mightyfinejonboy 7 лет назад

    2.34

  • @jpphoton
    @jpphoton 7 лет назад +1

    excellent intellectually honest communiqué to the greater community outside of science on cases in point. good show tally ho!

  • @alexandrugheorghe5610
    @alexandrugheorghe5610 7 лет назад +17

    Can't focus. She's too gorgeous. :(

  • @davidb2885
    @davidb2885 7 лет назад

    0:07 Next video

  • @meesternadim
    @meesternadim 7 лет назад

    Hi guys i am mexican

  • @Itssilentcat
    @Itssilentcat 7 лет назад

    Mimikyu

  • @MRconfusedboy
    @MRconfusedboy 7 лет назад

    she looks like mary jane from spiderman movie

  • @vaderdudenator1
    @vaderdudenator1 4 года назад

    😍😍

  • @Binyamin.Tsadik
    @Binyamin.Tsadik 7 лет назад

    Reminds me of the climate change debate :D

  • @DeepPastry
    @DeepPastry 7 лет назад +3

    That's not confirmation bias, that's not what the original list was for. Original list is stuff that's clearly not comets, yet might be confused for comets. Everyone else is putting in everything from historic lists. And they're all adding the footnote "no neb". So the only confirmation bias we are seeing is hers.

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja 7 лет назад +12

      The fact that two papers using the same data and the same methods could get diametrically opposite results is a pretty strong indication that at least one of them has to be biased by something.

    • @DeepPastry
      @DeepPastry 7 лет назад +1

      The Messier catalog was just a list of things that could be confused for comets that weren't comets. Messier started it and had friends add to it so they could more easily find comets without having these "not comets" messing with their searches. (Additionally you have to understand the quality of equipment)
      The list is of historic importance, which is code for you leave everything on it. That's not bias, that's just accepting that history happens. There's a few things that are not "nebulae" on the list, which is why those later lists say "no neb" they are saying it's not a nebulae, it's just on the list.
      The two recent papers has one saying they don't think it's an open cluster and the other saying it appears to be a very old and nearly dispersed open cluster, that's not them saying it's clearly a tight open cluster. And it would still stay on every list possible, because the history of the field matters.
      Two papers using the same data to come up with different conclusions is just science being science. A third paper using a completely different set of data to better answer the previous discourse is just science. Claiming the third paper proves confirmation bias isn't science, it's its own form of confirmation bias.
      And the object would still stay on every single list because the history of the field matters.

    • @EebstertheGreat
      @EebstertheGreat 7 лет назад +1

      I agree with everything you are saying except that this video is somehow an example of "confirmation bias." She is just misusing a word. She is not biased to confirm a belief she already held while dismissing evidence to the contrary.

    • @charlesbaker7703
      @charlesbaker7703 5 лет назад +1

      @@DeepPastry wish there was someway to highlight your reply. It sums up the situation perfectly. "Science being science" and building on historical data and why that data was originally collected (nebulosity not comets).

    • @LardGreystoke
      @LardGreystoke 3 года назад

      It isn't a thing so it doesn't belong in a list of things.