Juno and The New Jupiter: What Have We Learned So Far? (live public talk)

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 28 авг 2024

Комментарии • 559

  • @colincutts1834
    @colincutts1834 5 лет назад +5

    Utterly brilliant presentation by Dr Levin . I cannot pretend to have understood a great deal of it, but the fact that I understood ANY of it is testament enough of Dr Levin's grasp of, and enthusiasm for, his subject.

  • @deeliciousplum
    @deeliciousplum 6 лет назад +77

    Thank you to NASA and to all who make these talks accessible. This one on Jupiter is exceptionally insightful.

  • @ZeedijkMike
    @ZeedijkMike 5 лет назад +12

    One of the best lectures I have seen for a long time. Good and clear presented and very good answers in the Q & A. Even a "We don't know" can be a good answers. That's what this kind of science is about. Getting the answers to the stuff we don't know.

  • @AllAboutYouTubers13
    @AllAboutYouTubers13 Год назад +2

    First time listening to a talk and im glad i did plus i may watch others too because more info than a half our doc

  • @irina-zk8iq
    @irina-zk8iq 3 года назад +3

    Jupiter formed from the leftover of the Sun and every planet in our solar system is formed from the leftover of Jupiter. Wow!!! I love this type of lectures and presentations, when teacher or presenter is humble and keep things super simple.

  • @dutchhoke6555
    @dutchhoke6555 2 года назад +2

    So smart, and understandable guy. And finally a Q & A where you can hear the question. Well done.

  • @hardtarget9969
    @hardtarget9969 5 лет назад +5

    Wow! What a wonderful presentation 👍👏 I can watch & hear such sessions forever without getting bored. So much information & knowledge. I wish they publish complete unedited videos about their incredible findings about "Jupiter's"

  • @dbreardon
    @dbreardon 5 лет назад +19

    Fantastic presentation for the layperson. This guy gave a great overall review of the results coming from this project.

  • @georgeg1240
    @georgeg1240 5 лет назад +4

    Glad to hear that Juno has been a successful mission up to date. Good luck NASA towards achieving your expectations and thank you for your insightful learning program.

  • @metalgear-
    @metalgear- 6 лет назад +5

    Honestly the greatest presentation Ive ever seen. The Universe is very dangerous & scary but perfection. A work of art. The only way to describe what we observe & our existence of life around us.

    • @wbiro
      @wbiro 5 лет назад

      'Perfection' is an emotion. Get over it...

    • @stephenkevindoss1474
      @stephenkevindoss1474 4 года назад

      The only way? I prefer genesis 1

  • @wusticality
    @wusticality 5 лет назад +4

    This is just outstanding, so deeply humbling and beautiful!

  • @aidanisan
    @aidanisan 6 лет назад +2

    Dr Levin explains things really well - could be my teacher any day!

  • @im12runb4trouble
    @im12runb4trouble 5 лет назад +3

    Thankk you NASA This is great for putting me to sleep every night. Only takes about 5 minutes and i'm out like a light. Appreciate it.

    • @aubreydebliquy8051
      @aubreydebliquy8051 5 лет назад +1

      Dont worry, you are not missing anything. NASA has no clue about the most fundamental forces in the universe and ignores them like the rest of the consensus scientific community by worshiping at the altar of the believers in the 100 year old general relativity hoax.

    • @helpdeskjnp
      @helpdeskjnp 4 года назад

      You’ve got that right. The universe is electrical and black holes and dark matter are a fantasy NASA uses to bleed money with.

    • @maxv9464
      @maxv9464 Год назад +1

      @@helpdeskjnp Sure, bro. Not like we've images black holes and detected gravitational waves or anything.

  • @mingerone
    @mingerone 6 лет назад +4

    Fantastic fun presentation. Look forward to more in a few years.

  • @lilyjeanholt8210
    @lilyjeanholt8210 4 года назад +1

    Juno lauched on my sons birthday!

  • @johnterryhoover8108
    @johnterryhoover8108 3 года назад +2

    Dr. Steve Levin is a very amazing man. I have never seen such a professional, skilled and interesting narration and presentation of scientific facts. He let's me believe in NASA again after the stupidity to play a Hip Hop song using the curiosity rover on Mars. Thank you alone for this trust in Nasa again Dr. Levin. Because of people like you have I hope for a better future with prosperity and scientific achievements for our society.

  • @wbwarren57
    @wbwarren57 6 лет назад +24

    Hearing this speaker and the questions from the audience gives me hope for the future of the human race.

    • @AvNotasian
      @AvNotasian 6 лет назад +1

      50% of the population is below average, this is an example of the upper 10%. Just keep watching the stars and optimism will rise within you.

    • @wbwarren57
      @wbwarren57 6 лет назад +2

      Do'n't forget - this is the Trump era. Intelligent people are not wanted any longer. The fact that this speaker (and the people in the audience) slipped through the Trump an-intelligence filters is remarkable. Don't believe me? Try and use the phrase "global warming" at the Environmental Protection Agency or, if you are a scientist there, to attend conferences on climate change.

    • @shirleymason7697
      @shirleymason7697 6 лет назад

      William Warren .........but not for some of the commenters here. They like to say the same thing on many of these lectures.

    • @shirleymason7697
      @shirleymason7697 6 лет назад

      William Warren .......I’m actually thinking the questions, except for one, are rather naive.

    • @inkyguy
      @inkyguy 6 лет назад

      If the crowd were the size of a weekend Penn State football game audience I’d be a lot more hopeful!

  • @leomartin5965
    @leomartin5965 4 года назад +1

    The storms on Jupiter shows that anamolies COULD BE SENTIENT.

    • @mjmcrae1168
      @mjmcrae1168 2 года назад

      In other words…Jupiter is alive? Perhaps.

  • @dipi71
    @dipi71 6 лет назад +14

    I was sent here by NASA’s Astronomy Picture of the Day 2018-05-21 _(»Jupiter Cloud Animation from Juno«)._
    Very nice presentation by Dr Levin. Cheers!

    • @robertcoyle164
      @robertcoyle164 6 лет назад +1

      dipi thanks for heads up, I’ll defo check that out

  • @paulalyons4041
    @paulalyons4041 6 лет назад +1

    I'm finding this very interesting. I don't even feel freaked out by it so much anymore. Good work.

  • @iamthemiracle81
    @iamthemiracle81 6 лет назад +1

    Dr. Levin crushed it. Very cool stuff.

  • @PolluxPavonis
    @PolluxPavonis 6 лет назад +11

    This is fantastic, thank you very much for the video.

  • @robertcoyle164
    @robertcoyle164 6 лет назад +3

    Absolutely awesome, can’t stop binge watching it’s fascinating stuff 👍

  • @Pwhisperer
    @Pwhisperer 6 лет назад +2

    I really enjoyed this program. This fella does an excellent job of explaining how things regarding Jupiter operate in a way that your normal listener can understand. Nothing is more frustrating than being taught by someone who isnt good at teaching.

  • @jolujo5842
    @jolujo5842 6 лет назад +2

    Just gotta love this new data!
    Makes the mind start churning and burning thinking of new physical models of our gas giant planets.

  • @veritas41photo
    @veritas41photo 6 месяцев назад +1

    Beautiful! I am getting goosebumps! If Jupiter were just a bit bigger (as I understand it) it would be a be a brown dwarf star! Those 3-D images of the circumpolar cyclones make me genuinely believe i!

  • @codependent864
    @codependent864 6 лет назад +1

    Please make a presentation with no live audience and only for the internet, so it can cover every subject more deeply. I was waiting a lot for this update since the last one several months ago. Thank you very much for posting this.

  • @jooky87
    @jooky87 6 лет назад +3

    Amazing!! Awesome work! I underestimated Juno, but no way this is such good research and a great presentation.
    Forget rockets NASA, keep up this type of real important space science!!

    • @karlspear6729
      @karlspear6729 6 лет назад +2

      "Forget Rockets"? How do you think NASA gets these probes out there?

    • @thundercactus
      @thundercactus 6 лет назад +1

      well ULA built the Atlas V, so really NASA didn't have anything to do with the rocket on this launch lol

    • @travelwithpaalii007
      @travelwithpaalii007 Год назад

      ​@@karlspear6729😂

  • @RonJohn63
    @RonJohn63 4 года назад +5

    29:59 All that spinning and heat tells me that the whole atmosphere should be turbulent.

  • @susanh695
    @susanh695 6 лет назад +4

    A very informative lecture, many thanks!

  • @Huxtee7
    @Huxtee7 6 лет назад +2

    Napoleon Dynamite has come far. Fly high my brother.

  • @AboveBeyondVapor
    @AboveBeyondVapor 5 лет назад +1

    The stable pattern of cyclones at the poles strongly suggests a principle of physics we haven't developed yet. It can't just be random accident.

  • @tracym9763
    @tracym9763 5 лет назад +1

    So are the two poles with the 5 and 8 cyclones and the spinning direction responsible for keeping all the winds, gases, and storms on Jupiter from moving off the planet? Kind of like keeping a massive vortex going so nothing can move off on its direction?

  • @shirleymason7697
    @shirleymason7697 6 лет назад +1

    Impressive video animation of poles. Thanks.

  • @chicotruco
    @chicotruco 5 лет назад +1

    everything sound interesting, I didn't understand a lot but it sounds amazing maybe I'll watch this video a bunch of times see if i can catch more

  • @DunedinMultimedia2
    @DunedinMultimedia2 6 лет назад +17

    An excellent presentation from Dr Levin.

  • @magicdaddytunes
    @magicdaddytunes 6 лет назад +1

    Really great, so detailed and informative. Who are the haters?

    • @inkyguy
      @inkyguy 6 лет назад

      magicdaddytunes, Russian bots and lonely guys living in their parents’ basements.

  • @no_more_free_nicks
    @no_more_free_nicks 6 лет назад +1

    Very good presentation. Thanks, I learned a lot!

  • @coreysteady
    @coreysteady 6 лет назад +1

    very cool! thank you for posting this.

  • @VikramSingh-tl9vj
    @VikramSingh-tl9vj 5 лет назад +2

    Really a very good🙂☺ presentation
    And we got its main concept

  • @elchepacabra9658
    @elchepacabra9658 6 лет назад +61

    This is great presentation thank you!

  • @hatorlethos8623
    @hatorlethos8623 6 лет назад +9

    Impressive presentation. Science at it's best.

    • @affordablesolarguy
      @affordablesolarguy 6 лет назад

      the only good thing about it is admitting that their "theory" was all wrong,, and their predictions once again were all wrong. But guess what, Wal Thorhill predicted it correctly, go check out the Thunderbolt Project for real science and a much better understanding with real world predictions that come true.

    • @MaciejBogdanStepien
      @MaciejBogdanStepien 6 лет назад

      * Popularizing science at its best.

  • @Erowens98
    @Erowens98 5 лет назад +2

    Never thought Jupiter could be so interesting, thank you.

  • @linkdude64
    @linkdude64 6 лет назад +2

    This was great! Thank you!

  • @shirleymason7697
    @shirleymason7697 6 лет назад +1

    GREAT !! Thank you.

  • @WDIO-RADIO
    @WDIO-RADIO 6 лет назад +3

    Very informative, thanks.

  • @88njtrigg88
    @88njtrigg88 6 лет назад +4

    "Hasn't cooled off since it's formation," that was a priceless. Electric Universe thanks W.T.

    • @wbiro
      @wbiro 5 лет назад

      The electric universe died in 1992.

  • @psquare2260
    @psquare2260 5 лет назад +1

    Love the video.

  • @London97
    @London97 8 месяцев назад +1

    Magnetic field is crucial to know what’s happening

  • @veronicamascaro5858
    @veronicamascaro5858 6 лет назад +1

    Outstanding presenter. Thank you.

    • @atheistcable
      @atheistcable 5 лет назад

      Yes, Dr. Steve Levin is very interesting.

  • @ryutak4152
    @ryutak4152 6 лет назад +2

    Is it possible that there are whirpools on Jupiter that somehow affect magnetosphere and these whirpools even affect formation of cyclones?

  • @1jumbox
    @1jumbox 5 лет назад +5

    This guy needs to meet Wal Thornhill and Co.

    • @helpdeskjnp
      @helpdeskjnp 4 года назад

      He’d stick his head in the sand or else he’d be blacklisted by his colleagues.

  • @odinata
    @odinata 6 лет назад +1

    The fun part is the questions, the questions are the fun part..question question question, fun part fun part fun part!

  • @midwestDaniel
    @midwestDaniel 4 года назад

    So am I the only one who is wondering where the heck are the mission updates?
    I'm searching for them, only finding updates a year old or much more.
    Some show they've been posted as recently as 6 months ago,
    but I find upon examination that they are considerably older updates which have been re-posted.
    This appears to conceal a shocking lack of mission information.
    What have we learned since 2017? Since 2018?
    Where is the recent discussion about this---the panels, the Ted talks, the RUclips science updates?
    I can only describe them as "conspicuous by their absence".
    What are we not being told about the health of this mission?
    Must it be hidden behind releases of neato fan art?

  • @illicitbang4577
    @illicitbang4577 6 лет назад +2

    22.43 - music by 'Vangelis' nice

  • @justfloat1
    @justfloat1 3 года назад +1

    The name Birkland comes to mind.

  • @JamesC696
    @JamesC696 5 лет назад +1

    Will be interesting to see how they figure out how to see through more then 350 km of ammonia.

  • @user-vo8ss2bm3p
    @user-vo8ss2bm3p 6 лет назад +195

    Football field - most used unit in american science.)

    • @rhoddryice5412
      @rhoddryice5412 6 лет назад +5

      Even if we refer to a football field or an american football field they are basicly the same, so it's a great unit.

    • @earthlingjohn
      @earthlingjohn 6 лет назад +12

      Also popular...Rhode Island & Delaware.

    • @fredygump5578
      @fredygump5578 6 лет назад +4

      I'm American...and I don't understand it either! And be careful, American football field is different than the rest of the world's football field...just in case you are converting football fields to your preferred playing field unit. :)

    • @skinny55772
      @skinny55772 6 лет назад +7

      +fredy gump No need to encourage envy-driven hate and delusional bigotry. No, it's not the most units used American science, just occasionally in presentations for laymen purposes.
      The "handegg" jab is also inane considering balls don't have to be spherical and most sports names aren't literal.
      Look how many comments here are hyperbolic bashing of this great presentation, sick animosity.

    • @karlmuster263
      @karlmuster263 6 лет назад +17

      1 Manhattan Island = 1x10^4 football fields, 1 Rhode Island = 62 Manhattan Islands, 1 Texas = 220 Rhode Islands, 1 Continental US = 11 Texases

  • @DaydreamNative
    @DaydreamNative 6 лет назад +3

    Fantastic stuff, I'd really love a site dedicated to Jovian weather, those cyclones are so fascinating.

  • @zapfanzapfan
    @zapfanzapfan 5 лет назад +2

    I'm mostly interested in Europa but I guess it's parent planet is pretty interesting too :-)

  • @NeonsStyleHD
    @NeonsStyleHD 6 лет назад +9

    If the interior is rotating *_like_* a solid body, but it's a liquid, then that means there's something causing this non-differential rotation. ie If it rotates like a solid body, then the outside needs to rotate faster than the inside for it to rotate the same speed regardless of depth. What is causing this???

    • @origamiscienceguy6658
      @origamiscienceguy6658 6 лет назад +6

      My guess would be the inner solid core creates a magnetic field which “drags” the outer core along with it.

    • @Sulucnumoh420
      @Sulucnumoh420 6 лет назад

      taylor sims I think u misubtersood his question. He was saying the outside of the core needs to rotate faster than the centerpoint.

    • @TheReaverOfDarkness
      @TheReaverOfDarkness 6 лет назад +5

      I have a hypothesis. Maybe they're wrong and the inside is solid.

    • @AvNotasian
      @AvNotasian 6 лет назад +3

      +TheReaverOfDarkness
      If it was a solid the magnetic field would not be able to be generated.
      +NeonsStyle
      There was a question at the end relating to this, someone asked what is the viscosity of this liquid the answer was "no one knows, but with better instruments we may be able to find out"

    • @TheReaverOfDarkness
      @TheReaverOfDarkness 6 лет назад

      If it was a solid, it would probably still move about, since at those pressures solid doesn't stop it. So the fact that it seems still is actually really strange regardless of the state.

  • @judychurley6623
    @judychurley6623 5 лет назад +1

    Remember, before you post comments, just because you don't understand complicated science, doesn't mean it is not true, or it is not a valid theory.

  • @bored9260
    @bored9260 6 лет назад

    Then again an opposing force of attraction could explain why they are so small so 1 force creates a Kinetic motion of direction based on the polarity of the rotational core within Jupiter and that same force which oppose in the directional force maintains them to be a small vortex storm...

  • @saturn5206
    @saturn5206 6 лет назад +2

    Jupiter is awesome

  • @jazz3733
    @jazz3733 5 лет назад +1

    Who needs the metric or empirical systems when we have the ''football fields, Olympic swimming pools, school buses, 747 jumbo jets, Rode Island and Texas system"

    • @Chris_Goulet
      @Chris_Goulet 4 года назад

      ...and LA (Los Angeles) basins.

  • @BoomedYetLush
    @BoomedYetLush 6 лет назад +1

    Does the Jovian magnetic field behave akin to the sun in having cyclic or slow variability? Im terms of the sun, I’m thinking of the slow variations in the polarity of the field as a function of latitude which arises in the convective zone. Could the field be slowly varying in a way that produces a non-bipolar pattern, or which appears to be asymmetric due to sampling aliasing?

  • @thehoss954
    @thehoss954 6 лет назад +1

    I'm surprised nobody asked about the red spot growing in altitude, but not reducing in circumference.

  • @edwardrhoads7283
    @edwardrhoads7283 4 года назад

    I think we are going to find Jupiter is dry. That core probably formed more from carbon not water (tar line, Jupiter probably formed inside the ice line but outside the tar line). I would speculate that Jupiter hit the runaway accretion phase when the ice line moved in past Jupiter (stars dim as they are forming so the tar and ice lines move inwards as the star is forming).

  • @ghostfifth
    @ghostfifth 5 лет назад

    Is it possible that the expansion of space causes forces inside of the space contained by atomic clouds to push outward on the surrounding matter causing an upward push that keeps you pressed down in some way ?

  • @zxwmabcdef5439
    @zxwmabcdef5439 5 лет назад

    It looks like I am owed a 1 year subscription to astronomy magazine and a bottle of French rose wine. I made a bet back when I was 15 that the core of Jupiter was a supercritical H₂ metal with heavier atoms dissolved in it. In addition I made a bet that the core would have a fuzzy boundary. According to the last JPL talk I was proved correct. When I was a small child I bet my parents that Io would be geologically active because of tidal heating. I was proved correct when voyager passed by. I made another bet that neptune would have rings with particles concentrated in arcs. I was proved correct.

    • @zxwmabcdef5439
      @zxwmabcdef5439 5 лет назад

      I am usually proved correct when it comes to astrophysics. It might be that it fascinates me so I do an abnormal amount of reading on the subject. When it comes to soft subjects I am almost always wrong.

  • @JamesC696
    @JamesC696 5 лет назад

    Now that you know that there's a pretty good sized ion field around Jupiter might it be used for another mission like Voyager provided they could add an ion propulsion engine to a Voyager 3 and 4. Voyager 1+2 used planetary acceleration orbits (terminology??) on it way out of the solar system without even knowing that the ion field was there. Maybe they could get a bigger boost off of Jupiter next time.

  • @riaanstander1580
    @riaanstander1580 5 лет назад

    Two things: 1. The total of storms on the North- and South poles are 5 and 8. Anything to do with Fibonacci? Any other numbers that do fit into the pattern? 2. What have we so far learned about our own planet by looking at the New Jupiter?

  • @leomartin5965
    @leomartin5965 4 года назад

    The core of JUPITER IS A DIAMOND AS BIG AS THE EARTH.

  • @puppiesarepower3682
    @puppiesarepower3682 2 года назад +1

    Thermodynamics is an incredible thing; and people rarely give it credit it's deserved.
    Saying "nature" offhand is really just a lazy way of waving thermodynamics off. You may as well replace "nature" with Zeus... and this actually is Planet Zeus.

  • @annehorsey6000
    @annehorsey6000 5 лет назад

    Music is too loud.

  • @williamorr1319
    @williamorr1319 6 лет назад

    I would ask...when the juno has spent its energy why not send it down the obvious dark hole at the north pole and leave the data equipment on???? to see the pressure levels and what exactly is inside the planet.....plasma pluss ???or what????

    • @wbiro
      @wbiro 5 лет назад

      The fuel isn't there.

  • @anafreitas1646
    @anafreitas1646 6 лет назад

    Are those storms on Jupiter the equivalent of CME's, Geomagnetic Storms and/or Solar Flares, playing out in a different environment?

  • @Silver.Fox.77
    @Silver.Fox.77 5 лет назад

    Why don't we use some of this data to create electromagnetic generators for planets without electromagnetic fields? Like MARS.

  • @tommeng6522
    @tommeng6522 6 лет назад +1

    Maybe, the bands move in different directions because of the ammonia levels?

    • @wbiro
      @wbiro 5 лет назад

      One question in a million... now start searching for the answers...

  • @wbiro
    @wbiro 5 лет назад

    One's mental image of Jupiter should have just changed drastically (become more refined)...
    Now, to get philosophical (since it is so direly needed):
    The first question is the Second Greatest Question of Life: Now What? (the Greatest being 'Why Bother?' and neither have been answered adequately yet by humans) (enter me). Specifically, the 'Now What?' in this case is 'Now what can one do with all of this new knowledge?' (and I am spurred to ask from the viewpoint of the practical tradesman culture that I was born into).
    The first practical use that comes to mind is energy - harnessing the variety of energy sources available (kinetic, magnetic, thermal, radioactive, pressure, chemical). The next 'Now What?' question is, 'Now what can we do with all of that harnessed energy?' Powering manufacturing immediately comes to mind... and the next 'now what' question would be, 'What would be the goal of all of that manufacturing?' Sadly, with clueless humans, the goals will be clueless (and foolishly subjective, courtesy of failed philosophers), and they will fuel vanity, fashion, envy, jealousy, xenophobia, prejudice, hate, war, domination, manipulation, greed, crime, depravity, absurdity, frivolity, aimlessness, idleness, depression, despair, and finally suicide (sorry, humans, you are still lacking on the philosophical front, and all of that knowledge will go down the toilet, cluelessness being blindly destructive) (enter me again) (though trying to improve the philosophical paradigm of humanity has been like trying to change the course of the Titanic with a canoe paddle).
    What does all of that mean?
    It means knowledge is far outpacing wisdom (and let's call wisdom 'good sense', since the word 'wisdom' has been abused by pretenders, frauds, knaves, and charlatans (who have destroyed many other words, too, such as 'truth', 'enlightenment', and 'salvation'), and its perverted offerings having been lapped up by fools).
    So three cheers for the blind acquisition of knowledge (I am being sarcastic - it rates no cheers).
    So, now what? Do we stop acquiring knowledge, or do we address the inadequate state of human wisdom? (and you would be surprised at how many people would recommend the former, out of self-serving (and ultimately suicidal) knavery, out of malnipulated (my spontaneous term) herd mentality (not to completely knock herd mentality, it has its virtues), out of sheer foolish capriciousness, and out of irrational fear). Philosophy Out. Great science - from clueless beings.
    43:58 Interesting to see NASA crowd sourcing...

  • @AboveBeyondVapor
    @AboveBeyondVapor 5 лет назад

    It is actually not 5 and 8 stable circumpolar cyclones. It is 6 and 9 cyclones. He is not counting the cyclone in the middle of each of these configurations.

  • @chicks-on-the-loose
    @chicks-on-the-loose 6 лет назад

    love how you use the word presumably, cause much of hwat you went out to measure is based on old premisses.

    • @wbiro
      @wbiro 5 лет назад

      You can't build sensors for the unknown...

  • @bored9260
    @bored9260 6 лет назад

    You could be mixed up with density versus velocity and speed. A thousand times faster then the earths core, could be cesium or it could be something lighter then Mercury..

  • @saraidreadful3313
    @saraidreadful3313 5 лет назад +2

    19:18 You know why it's 5 and 8- Fibonacci sequence, spiracles through all things.

  • @elmaitro8146
    @elmaitro8146 6 лет назад

    or could there be a bump causing the red spot to always be there?

    • @wbiro
      @wbiro 5 лет назад

      Nope.

  • @elmaitro8146
    @elmaitro8146 6 лет назад

    could the great big spot tell something about where the lmh core is?

  • @sleddy01
    @sleddy01 5 лет назад +1

    5 cyclones around the south and 8 around the north stable over 2 years. That is both random and consistent in a way that begs to be discovered. It's a shame we are finding all these wars to fight instead of investing half of our discretionary funding on something productive.

  • @bored9260
    @bored9260 6 лет назад

    And no I'm not going to agree about the fluidic wobble of the rotating in a wave motion. Unless you can prove a hoopla hoop fall to the ground while it does a rotational spin causes a cyclone all the way down to the point it will hit the flat surface of the ground.

    • @wbiro
      @wbiro 5 лет назад

      There is a world outside of your head...

  • @GrandpaWithers
    @GrandpaWithers 5 лет назад

    I’m curious why people downvote this?

  • @thomasfholland
    @thomasfholland 6 лет назад +1

    Liquid metallic hydrogen!!! Say that again!! Awesome science being done here by NASA/JPL.

  • @bolinar6434
    @bolinar6434 6 лет назад

    God the HD image quality is poor like 256kt/s modem. Nice video tought on Jupiter

  • @walterwalmut9066
    @walterwalmut9066 5 лет назад

    Thanks for great report. Why there are so many old people in the audience?

  • @ivocossa4381
    @ivocossa4381 6 лет назад

    so is there normal gravity at the poles?

    • @wbiro
      @wbiro 5 лет назад

      Define abnormal gravity...

  • @ZomBeeNature
    @ZomBeeNature 5 лет назад

    I kind of watched it all

  • @TechNed
    @TechNed 6 лет назад +3

    I did wonder about the interaction of the magnetic field on the movement of the conductive hydrogen but you had a pretty good go at explaining that. Still, it reminds me of the difference between rotors and armatures. That asymmetric field pattern makes me wonder if (because of Lenz's law?) that regions of the swirling core are exchanging function between motor and generator.

    • @TechNed
      @TechNed 6 лет назад +2

      I'm in awe of people analysing such complexities!

    • @affordablesolarguy
      @affordablesolarguy 6 лет назад

      Its all controlled by electro magnetism, obviously. Not nuclear or mass based gravity. Jupiter is obviously an electrical circuit.

  • @kalpssays
    @kalpssays 5 лет назад

    how do you jump to this conclusion that just because Jupiter is heavy it formed before sun?

    • @stephenkevindoss1474
      @stephenkevindoss1474 4 года назад +1

      Kalpesh Popat my guess is that it fits the narrative

    • @helpdeskjnp
      @helpdeskjnp 4 года назад

      That’s the best answer I’ve seen so far.

  • @romchompa6858
    @romchompa6858 6 лет назад

    lol the 3d image of the cyclones at the pole, i could've made with the most simple graphics program making a relief of the contrast image, Jupiter's surface there probably doesn't look anything like that in actual 3d.

  • @benharness-go9bg
    @benharness-go9bg Год назад +1

    Yep your cool

  • @harrywissink842
    @harrywissink842 5 лет назад

    How can they calculate orbits around Jupiter?

    • @maxv9464
      @maxv9464 Год назад

      Orbital mechanics.

  • @donstevens9966
    @donstevens9966 6 лет назад

    How do I send these people photographs