Watched this 3 times. So simple and well done. The sheer combination of things that have come together just right to make a stable earth and sentient life is amazing. Even if we find that to be common in the universe , still AMAZING!
Thank you so much for making these so teenagers like me who have access to little opportunities can still learn about the universe straight from the experts. Your channel really is extraordinary.
The way you tell these stories is therapeutic. I sincerely thank you for the time and research you invest in creating one of the highest quality content, Astronomy wise.
So, true! I have tried to watch these at night past few nights, but his voice is so ASMR and calm I fall asleep (Not because it's boring). That's why I am watching now, LOL.
@@KrazyVideoChick you know exactly what I am going through then and it kinda sucks because I would really like to be able to get through the whole thing without having to worry about waking up to a dead phone covered in drool because I have passed out watching this on my 4th attempt. I am seriously considering going with CC and muting my phone. lol but I'm not trying to complain about the video. Top notch in my book. That's all thanks
@@KrazyVideoChick I do the same. I watch them because they are fascinating, interesting and informative. I watch them again as I lay on my bed. Before I know, I am asleep. I found myself dreaming and learning as I digest his video in my sleep.
Among all the crap channels youtube tries to ram down my throat everyday, now and then it actually gets a recommendation right. So glad I found this gem of a channel.
Now, I'm no astrophysicist, I don't know squat about quantum mechanics or string theory or anything like that, but this channel always fascinates me. Keep up the great work!
He was born to a German speaking family in Prussia. It's weird how nationalistic Poles are about science, aggressively trying to claim any scientist and any scientific achievement they can find any strenuous connection to Poland to
@This is the best name i could come up with 🧐 Sure, that would require Drake equation multiplied by the probability of professors being on a planet, then multiplied by probability of circumstances where a professor can become better than our best of professors discussed here 🧐
Copernicus was Polish. Descended mostly from prominent Polish families from cities that were in the Polish kingdom in his day and are still part of Poland today. He would have spoken Polish and Latin. He was educated there and published his works there. He did have a Prussian grandfather but to say he was German is inaccurate.
Wow I’m really glad you cleared that up Man I really cared about that. In fact that’s exactly why I clicked on this video to learn about where Copernicus was from
When I heard “German philosopher” I immediately went to the comment section to find this comment, but I didn’t expect it to be the first one hahah
3 года назад+32
Absolutely love the narration, and the content. Also Mikołaj Kopernik was Polish with Prussian/German descendancy. Definetly he was not German Astronomer, he was born and lived in very mixed culturally city back then in Polish Kingdom, studied on Polish University, and definetly Germans are envy of Kopernik :)
I am from Pakistan and a scientist. I really appreciate these videos. It gives me the feeling of our prsent time Carl Sagan. We as human beings should appreciate science, knowledge that has reached us through the collaborative generation after generation of hard workng individuals from all human nations.
I could actually listen to him forever, so happy i found this a few weeks ago. Nothing but amazing content narrated by someone who imo breaks everything down to an absolute tee. Can't wait for more content
Thank you for being honest an unbiased, for not following an agenda and admitting when you don't know. In my opinion the more we really look into the universe and science without biased and with an open mind the more it is apparent that there is a creator.
Interesting though is the presentation that says 1 out of 200 stars is like our Sun (500 million conservatively in the Milky Way alone), but yet aren't common. That would seem a bias towards rarity, when the data conservatively suggests "not so rare".
@@StefenTower my quick math said 1 out of 300. Still you have a point. I think the presentation is just not detailed enough. What would be important to elucidate is the bit about 'stars like our sun often have more severe solar flares'. Stars like our sun how? Just the same type? Same type and age? Same type and age and belonging to this 'lower third' of activity level? I think that would help.
A belated thank you for this and every other video you’ve made for us. I’m truly thankful, and sometimes amazed, sometimes confused, sometimes melancholy and feeling a bit insignificant. Keep up the great work you have been achieving.
Nicolaus Copernicus (/koʊˈpɜːrnɪkəs, kə-/;[2][3][4] Polish: Mikołaj Kopernik;[b] German: Nikolaus Kopernikus; Niklas Koppernigk; 19 February 1473 - 24 May 1543) was a Polish Renaissance-era mathematician and astronomer, who formulated a model of the universe that placed the Sun rather than Earth at the center of the universe,
@@madisonbrown8851 Saying that some youtube dude who narrates science stuff shouldn't be compared to Carl Sagan who was a fucking genius is negative? How so, kiddo?
@@EK-sv9iq I'm British and have the same accent, trust me, it's not just that. He's a great science communicator. I'm sure he would be every bit as amazing with an American accent! ;P
As far as we can tell, for the vast majority of the history of life on Earth, it was single-celled organisms. Multi-cellular life might be extremely rare.
N Strat Yes! And back then, our cell phones were made of wood and we'd have to make our own 'clicking' sounds when we were pretending to text. Contact lenses were also made of wood back then and splinters made them difficult to wear so we had to sand them very carefully and, well-being opaque-they made riding the smaller and faster dinosaurs quite unsafe. (Sssso glad they invented insurance soon thereafter...) Working under unicellular bosses did nothing for our job satisfaction back then but you sure could pack the little bastards into the boardroom like nobody's business. It was a bad day when you stepped on a whole team of executives because your contact lenses were of a denser hardwood under your sucky benefits and your dino wiped out on the way home all because you were texting your frustration into a small piece of wood when you should have been watching the road. 'Good old days, my ass': we really do have it good nowadays…
Not only your contents are extremely interesting and they provide deep thought, but your narration has the beauty of poetry. It's unusual for a science channel to have this beautiful combination of content and narration (I don't mean to diminish other science channels, they are great too, but their narrated approach is more direct). One of the best channels out there, no doubt.
@@MichaelMajeran true Poland and Germany have a very complicated history we've been invaded by them multiple times so a lot of poles were and are accustomed to the language places like Silesia still have German influence to this day
Thank you very much professor! It's awesome to learn all this from someone with 100% passion. I've never ever had a teacher that cared so much about the subject, and that makes a world of difference
I have no doubt in my mind you hear this a lot, but I want to explicitly mark your work here as exceptional. The respect I have for you and your team is massive and I have watched everything on your channel multiple times in awe. Please make sure you find someone as inspiring and capable as yourself to keep this channel going and growing as you in hopefully a long time from now will retire. The importance of your work here is as great as the universe. The importance of reporting your findings without any intermediaries, specifically the precision and agility it allows, we can't be without.
This is a wonderful & clear explanation as to how life on this planet, in this Universe has absolutely nothing to do with religion, and everything to do with the 'roll of the dice'.
Your videos are all so beautiful, poetic, intelligent, and thought provoking. The video Earth's life from start to finish even brought tears to my eyes and left me in awe. I'm so glad I found your channel.
Great informative video! And thanks for including the fascinating saga of the Kepler mission. I hadn't read about all of the challenges that it had to face.
If you can't see how special the whole arrangement of this huge machine, you wouldn't believe it actually exists. Everything is perfect for life. No mistakes. Also the sun burning for billions of years, it should have changed or run low on fuel, but what we will learn is that the whole universe is a huge machine, and energy goes wireless to where there is need and where it is abundant. The possibility of all these factors going on with out a glitch, the moon being at the right place, the sun being at the right place and continuing to work as it has for billions of years. We don't see the picture yet because we believe that it is good chances, nothing is as long lasting to be chance.
Also please note that depending on the time in history Poland has been both German and or Russian. My family history is "germanic" but the ancient family castle is located in what is now Poland.
Oh yes our sun continues to amaze us with its warmth and life giving rays...an amazing video as ever. Scientifically researched unlike many other sensationalised RUclips channels. A very thought provoking premise that both the Sun and the Earth are rare cousins...and that we are the custodians and tenants of life in this cosmological event... Amazing video...Amazing narration. Keep these videos coming.
Dear Mr Kipping, thanks for the presentation. Just like your other video on whether we are alone or not in the vastness of the universe, so too, in this one your presentation is superb and you manage to keep "neutral". I was expecting though to see towards which side you are leaning but no avail. I did come to the conclusion that the sun is rare, the earth is rare and we are unique and alone; based on your presentation. "The sun ripens a bunch of grapes as if it had nothing else in the universe to do (Galileo Galilei)" Thank you again.
Video is very interesting, I am glad to have valuable content like this on YT. Thank you for spotting and correcting Copernicus origin as he was born in Poland (Torun - there is university named after him) and died in Poland, and as a Polish astronomer he has contributed to the changes which are affecting our lives even today. Apart of Polish he spoken German, Italian, Latin and Greek. This made him open-minded. Great respect, I love the channel. 👍
One of the other ways in which it appears we may be "special" has been the discovery that we are in a void. A void being a region of space in which the density of galaxies is low, very low. Not only do we live in a void but our void is a super void meaning that it is a lot bigger than "normal" voids. And not just any super void, the largest super void in the observable universe. This presents the problem that our measurements of how fast the universe is expanding may have been thrown off by living in an unusual part of the universe.
If the universe is expanding and we can't travel back and forth even at light speed. . I assume. Early life had a choice. Go with the flow, or fight the tide. . But contextually since this is space, would it not be easier to just travel inward to the "center" since it is traveling towards you. . If u travel away it might be more difficult or easier. . The defining factor, the direction your galaxy travels and where the big bang emminated from. . The real question. Where do we stand from the center. . Is life emminating from a circular safe zone from the big bang? Or is it a time thing. . If life existed before us and is out there. Would we find more in the edge or towards the center?
I only just found your channel, absolutely compelling, as a child Carl Sagan switched on my mind with his series Cosmos, your channel has awoken those same thoughts and feelings in me. Thank you for taking the time to make this content and for being a superb educator.
The work that the team is producing here is really incredible. It's so uniquely creative and innovative. Many arguments have been made about what constitutes a definition of life over time. From self-replication to carbon-based chemistry, etc. Although one that has always struck me as the broadest catch-all conception is that on all levels-life seeks out and thrives in low entropy environments. Almost as if the raison d'etre of life is to forever fight entropy. Indeed, a low entropic star like our Sun fits this conception of where life might find a hospitable home quite perfectly. Though order can be seen in natural formations throughout the universe; it's difficult to conceive of discovering extrasolar life without a low entropic signature of some sort. In this vein, it seems that this conception is where we should really begin our search for extrasolar life: low entropic stellar and galactic environments. This idea, in particular, got me thinking-about Hoag's Object (PGC 54559) and the Terrascope concept. I can't recall ever seeing such an ordered structure in all of Astronomy. Indeed, some of the largest constructions ever created by our species throughout history have been observatories. Could it be that Hoag's Object is a massive galactic lens structure? With the outer ring forming a kind of aperture that can be manipulated? It's often conceived that the manipulation of matter would be a telltale sign of life, but what about the manipulation and structural management of empty space as well?
Absolutely loved the setting used for filming! Greenery, chirping birds! Such a right decision, even if caused by the current situation - this puts at the center the very thing that the video talks about, the sun and all the life it creates here on Earth. Also, your voice is so comforting! Perfect for the calm discussion of science, especially study of such grand scales. It puts me in a trance-like state, but not like a sedative, just calms a mind immediately - to listen, to think and to remember what really matters.
Thanks! It’s always tricky with lighting and audio outside, especially as someone who’s trained in astronomy and not cinematography! But I personally really enjoy a change of scenery and getting some fresh air for filming.
What you have done (by yourself !), is what is known as ‘film magic,’ lol, & man, there are reams of ‘info,’ & ideas, written about it !!! &, you have such wonderful info, to impart ! 💜✨🔆🌎. [Early filmmakers, before advent of ‘sound,’ had to be ‘inventive,’ & some were great masters at it, ref. modern film ‘Hugo,’ about the early filmic wizard, Georges Melies, played by Ben Kingsley... for example, lol, film & astronomy, are 2 great loves of my own ! ]. I Love what you have given us here. Thank you, most sincerely.
Yes, I also like to see videos filmed outside. As I spend several hours of nearly every day either gardening or out walking, makes me feel right at home while listening to a subject that's interested me since a young child.
I'm sure others have already commented this but Copernicus was Polish! Haha His non-latinized name was Mikolaj Kopernik. If I am not mistaken, he played a pivotal role in pushing heliocentrism into an accepted principal of our solar system, much to the chagrine of the Catholic Church.
This is the best channel on RUclips. Hands down. Interesting mix of history, scientific depth, incredible narrative, storytelling and excellent videography. Well done Cool Worlds. Bravo. 👏👏👏
Yes piggypiggy pig. We have been given an amazing amount of 'The right Place at the Right Time'. We are tremendously luck to be here. And look at the news now. With all those advantages we've been given, hate is the God we have chosen.
@@Ron4885 Marxism has created self destructive behavior. The sun, moon and earth will be here long after the enemies of humanity are stomped into ground.
A correction. It doesn't take 8 minutes for a photon to go from the sun's core to the earth. It can take up to a 100000 years to go from the core to the surface. It then takes 8 minutes from the surface to the earth.
it is fascinating how things that are vital for us can be dangerous and deadly at the same time. Instead of seeing the forces of nature entirely negatively, we should remember that they are part of a larger system that guarantees our lives.
Tomek - nie ogladales Seksmisjii?... "Kopernik byla kobieta"! ;-) Moze sie czlowiek zle wyslowil, chociaz podejrzewam, ze to cos gorszego. A moze po prostu nie CoolWorlds nie lubi Kopernika? lol Pozdrawiam.
It's hard not to be seduced by the romantic idea that we are in fact in a special place in the universe. Well, believe it! Isaac Arthur showed me that there's no such thing as infinity, not in our universe. The possibility space is just as limited as the possible position of an electron within an atom, the number is just much bigger. That same idea also proves to me that we are indeed special (there is only one portion within that possibility space that you can inhabit, and you're in it!) and should be thankful for our special experience - it's completely unique and every single one of us has that while we look upon the world/stars/universe with our own very unique eyes. Love the content, professor.
James Conroy regardless of what Isaac Arthur said there is such a thing as infinity, it’s a well defined mathematical concept, and materializes in our universe, for example a black hole singularity has infinite density
denislemenoir The idea that black holes have infinite density is nonsense. Conceptual ‘infinity’ exists. You can travel forwards on the surface of a sphere indefinitely, for example, but that isn’t the same thing as infinite possibility in an infinite universe. That’s not possible in our universe. It’s a finite space with finite possibilities. If you extend the observable universe by something like 10^65, you start to repeat because at that point, every possible position of every piece of matter has been seen already. Therefore, infinity at the cosmological level isn’t possible - we live in a finite possibility space. BTFO
Another fascinating 'special' piece that we've started to come to understand recently is the structure of our solar system. This may be a bias of them being easier to find, but we've found a LOT of solar systems where the 'inner system' (i.e. the Goldilocks zone) is filled with a couple massive gas giants, Jupiters or larger. No rocky worlds that might host liquid water and life there, at least not as independent planets. And even rocky, Earth-sized moons are likely uninhabitable, between the gas giants' radiation belts, the gravitational flux commonly seen in such moons in our system, and the extended periods of total solar eclipse as the moon moves into the shadow of the giant. Our system has no such 'inner giants', and instead seems to host a slew of 'outer giants', something we again haven't seen in many systems yet. It is theorized that these 'outer giants' acted as asteroid shields during the more chaotic periods of the early system, allowing life an earlier start on Earth than it may otherwise have enjoyed.
There is evidence that suggests that Jupiter was on an inward spiral towards the sun also but Saturn actually pulled Jupiter back to the outer solar system!
Thank you Cool Worlds team for yet another gem. Great topic. And by the way love the outdoor wooded setting for the video. A refreshing change from having to look at everyone's home office! Stay safe and keep the great work coming...
Thank you, Dr. Kipping, for another excellent presentation! I have believed that “Rare Earth” is probably correct . It seems that “Rare Sun”, as far as we now know, applies as well….
the only way anyone can dislike the videos on this channel are being someone who doesnt believe there's something beyond this world (no judging here... not right now at least..). It must be wonderful being instructed by professor Kipping..
I've said it before, but thank you SO MUCH for this channel and your efforts in making it. It captures my imagination absolutely! Please keep these amazing videos coming!!
I think this is my favorite channels on all platforms! You guys deliver us such great content, i almost feel myself a professor already, just by taking in your wisdom.
I am not even close to anything a scientist but my god he sure explains it to the core. Plus it's asmr to my mind. I think more when I hear him. Good job doctor. Keep up the good work. Enlighten us commons more about things we don't know.
I love your shows and think you're a brilliant scientist. I have also always thought maybe it's our sun that's different and why there is life here. Not the earth necessarily.
I heard Randall Carlson recently explaining that earth has gone through a very stable and quiet period since the last ice age. Explaining why civilisation has been able to prosper and progress so far in this time. Long may it continue 🤞
However im also wondering why NASA don't review or research deeper on the nearer Yellow dwarf star named Tau Ceti which is only 12 lightyears away on our solar system.. Its mass is 79% of sun and Luminousity of 65-70% of our Sun,it has three Rocket world (4 Planets confirmed)and two of those Rocky world were potentially Habitable, accordingly it was 7Billion years old(3Billion years older than our Sun)yet it still Cooler and dimmer than our sun cause its it has slightly less mass than our sun means it will live stable for another 2Billion years.. In my Opinion why not NASA put their heads on to Study Tau Ceti since its similar to our sun and has also a massive solar system similar to our own
Sir You explain "Stuff" with greatest of ease that a person with degree in Architecture and who wanted to be a Doctor understands it. (I wanted to be An Astronaut at age five🙃) I fell in Love with this Magnificent- Magical-Motherly Universe all over again.
maybe someone was up set over finding out we not special! or brokenhearted over finding out we are mediocre! it is hard for some to trade in hubris for humility.
I was raised being told that the sun is unremarkable and typical and average. And that Pluto is the 9th planet from the sun. I'm overwhelmed by all these changes. I need some stability
Well seeing no one else has ever found anything remotely like earth , or life , I think we are special. But maybe pointless. Just a distraction on a frequency..
"The universe was adapted from the beginning to give rise to life and intelligence." I read this 40 some years ago in Readers Digest. That is, what good is a wondrous creation without intelligent beings who are able to look at it and contemplate it. To be able to 'enjoy the view.' And now with all the telescopes, it is indeed one hell of a view!!
I ask this humbly, as I have no science background, but from my uneducated standpoint, is it possible that the 'Rare Earth' and 'Rare Sun' hypotheses exist co-dependently? I mean to ask.. is it possible the Mars sized object that crashed into Proto-Earth which purportedly created the Earth and Moon as we now know them to be also coincidentally occurred within the reach of a 'Rare Sun'? Can a 'Rare Sun" give rise to life simply by being a 'Rare Sun'?
How far out can we reasonably extrapolate this effect? Rare Sun, Rare Earth, Rare Solar system, Rare Quiet Spot on an Outer Arm of a Rare Galaxy in a relatively quiet parcel of space......? Could crunching these numbers give us a better idea of the possibility and possible locations of intelligent life?
I apologize for my naivete in these matters. I cannot speak intelligently about physics or mathematics or the like, though I wish I could. Your presentations of the workings of the Cosmos are captivating, to say the least. What intrigues me are the pattern repetitions in nature that seem to apply equally in the macro and micro worlds. Given the equilibrium Einstein's theory of relativity gifts to everything outside of a singularity, is it too far a stretch to use our galactic pattern, in its entirety, as the benchmark for where to look for life?
I don't have a science background, but after watching this, it does make me wonder if that is the solution to the fermi paradox. That having a rare earth that orbits a rare sun is so rare, that it only happens once every few galaxies or so.
@@SnootchieBootchies27 Thank you for the like. 'Rare' is a term used so frequently when referring to life on this planet and our planet itself. I think the math is going in the wrong direction. If you add up the rarity factors it would show how impossible it is that we are here. And yet here we are. Phx Bias
@@PhoenixBiasAmberBiasMusic Bad news: "The ability to retain an atmosphere is related to the magnetic field, which is also driven by internal heating. Prof. Primack noted that the heavy elements crucial to radiogenic heating are created during mergers of neutron stars, which are extremely rare events. The abundance of uranium and thorium appear to be key factors, possibly even another dimension for defining a Goldilocks planet."
I've never clicked on a video so fast. Excellent as always. You briefly touched on it in the video, but could it be that the Sun is in a period of low activity currently? Even 9000 years is a short timescale when it comes to the lifespan of a star. Perhaps I'm just grasping to try and make us less special haha
@@CoolWorldsLab I wonder if the regolith of the moon could be used to check the solar record over a much longer time period, say millions or billions of years
We do know that the Sun probably hasn't had any flares large enough to strip Earth of its atmosphere within the last few billion years, at least not any that have hit Earth. That puts an upper limit on the past activity level.
@@ergohack That's a very interesting point, I don't think I've seen any upper limit inferred from that point. Although usually with atmospheric stripping from flares, the risk is for M-dwarf planets due their much tighter habitable zones
"At the end of time, a moment will come when just one man remains. Then the moment will pass. Man will be gone. There will be nothing to show that we were ever here... but stardust. " - Pinbacker
The fact there isn't any earth analog in our own solar i.e a rocky planet with a large moon is terrifying in itself. Now that astronomers are scaling out to extrasolar systems and seeing that not only are earths rare, but also sun like stars it is really eye opening.
Josh M And there’s also the fact that we are in a stable orbit in the right part of the galaxy. Not too close to the center, with lots of radiation, but not too distant, where stars tend to be metal poor (and thus have fewer of the elements needed for a rocky planet like Earth.
Thank you Sun for allowing us to exist.
The sole reason of our existence.
@@Le0nnh *sol ...?
@@ergohack ☉
Love seeing you here. I've been subbed to your channel forever and have watched all your videos.
(And get a tan;)
Watched this 3 times. So simple and well done. The sheer combination of things that have come together just right to make a stable earth and sentient life is amazing. Even if we find that to be common in the universe , still AMAZING!
Thank you so much for making these so teenagers like me who have access to little opportunities can still learn about the universe straight from the experts. Your channel really is extraordinary.
You, my young friend are what this generation needs.
@@traecummings9853 Thank you kind stranger!
Thanks for hearting my comment! It made my day!
Hi Jason, Hey you are a member of humanity’s greatest generation. Go for it dear friend.
Jason I'm so happy to see your interest. Keep it up!
The way you tell these stories is therapeutic.
I sincerely thank you for the time and research you invest in creating one of the highest quality content, Astronomy wise.
Oh yes Nardi. I couldn't agree more.
Nardi...I agree. His information and perspective are excellent. His presentation is superb 👍👍👍
So, true! I have tried to watch these at night past few nights, but his voice is so ASMR and calm I fall asleep (Not because it's boring). That's why I am watching now, LOL.
@@KrazyVideoChick you know exactly what I am going through then and it kinda sucks because I would really like to be able to get through the whole thing without having to worry about waking up to a dead phone covered in drool because I have passed out watching this on my 4th attempt. I am seriously considering going with CC and muting my phone. lol but I'm not trying to complain about the video. Top notch in my book. That's all thanks
@@KrazyVideoChick I do the same. I watch them because they are fascinating, interesting and informative. I watch them again as I lay on my bed. Before I know, I am asleep. I found myself dreaming and learning as I digest his video in my sleep.
Among all the crap channels youtube tries to ram down my throat everyday, now and then it actually gets a recommendation right. So glad I found this gem of a channel.
RUclips should stop sending me "This Is My Mansion" or "I'm pregnant" videos.😥
I agree. I found this channel by random chances, and I'm so happy I did
Now, I'm no astrophysicist, I don't know squat about quantum mechanics or string theory or anything like that, but this channel always fascinates me. Keep up the great work!
My 10 year old son and myself really enjoy your content.
Keep up the good work. Thanks. 🇬🇧
Your voice is so therapeutic, calm and relaxing. The way you narrate the videos made me fall in love with your content.!
Kopernik (Copernicus) was Polish.
Read his biography. Great narration. Knowledge. Thank you.
That's really cool!
The things Polish people can accomplish if they don't drink ;)
Nah
@@RapturianCitizen😂
He was born to a German speaking family in Prussia. It's weird how nationalistic Poles are about science, aggressively trying to claim any scientist and any scientific achievement they can find any strenuous connection to Poland to
Best professor ever, and true scientist by the way.
Ever?!? lmao - please us with the data leading to this conclusion
@This is the best name i could come up with 🧐 Sure, that would require Drake equation multiplied by the probability of professors being on a planet, then multiplied by probability of circumstances where a professor can become better than our best of professors discussed here 🧐
I’m a true scientist as well. I have a doctorate in Armchair Quantum Mechanics _and_ Armchair Astronomy.
@@ksd593
I just finished that equation...the answer is BPE=1
@@EK-sv9iq It's an opinion. I find Dr. Kipping very inspiring and understand why someone could feel that way.
Copernicus was Polish. Descended mostly from prominent Polish families from cities that were in the Polish kingdom in his day and are still part of Poland today. He would have spoken Polish and Latin. He was educated there and published his works there. He did have a Prussian grandfather but to say he was German is inaccurate.
So he was Polish aii? So that's why he thought that no one's special! ;)
Wow I’m really glad you cleared that up Man I really cared about that. In fact that’s exactly why I clicked on this video to learn about where Copernicus was from
I’m polish and thanks for pointing this out mati
lol nationalists
When I heard “German philosopher” I immediately went to the comment section to find this comment, but I didn’t expect it to be the first one hahah
Absolutely love the narration, and the content. Also Mikołaj Kopernik was Polish with Prussian/German descendancy. Definetly he was not German Astronomer, he was born and lived in very mixed culturally city back then in Polish Kingdom, studied on Polish University, and definetly Germans are envy of Kopernik :)
I'm hard of hearing so I always watch with the subtitles on. Just so you know, he changed it to "*Polish astronomer" in the subtitles.
This video should be titled “Prof Kipping calmly dismantles mediocrity”
I am from Pakistan and a scientist. I really appreciate these videos. It gives me the feeling of our prsent time Carl Sagan. We as human beings should appreciate science, knowledge that has reached us through the collaborative generation after generation of hard workng individuals from all human nations.
I could actually listen to him forever, so happy i found this a few weeks ago. Nothing but amazing content narrated by someone who imo breaks everything down to an absolute tee. Can't wait for more content
Thank you for being honest an unbiased, for not following an agenda and admitting when you don't know. In my opinion the more we really look into the universe and science without biased and with an open mind the more it is apparent that there is a creator.
Interesting though is the presentation that says 1 out of 200 stars is like our Sun (500 million conservatively in the Milky Way alone), but yet aren't common. That would seem a bias towards rarity, when the data conservatively suggests "not so rare".
@@StefenTower my quick math said 1 out of 300. Still you have a point. I think the presentation is just not detailed enough. What would be important to elucidate is the bit about 'stars like our sun often have more severe solar flares'. Stars like our sun how? Just the same type? Same type and age? Same type and age and belonging to this 'lower third' of activity level? I think that would help.
A belated thank you for this and every other video you’ve made for us. I’m truly thankful, and sometimes amazed, sometimes confused, sometimes melancholy and feeling a bit insignificant. Keep up the great work you have been achieving.
Nicolaus Copernicus (/koʊˈpɜːrnɪkəs, kə-/;[2][3][4] Polish: Mikołaj Kopernik;[b] German: Nikolaus Kopernikus; Niklas Koppernigk; 19 February 1473 - 24 May 1543) was a Polish Renaissance-era mathematician and astronomer, who formulated a model of the universe that placed the Sun rather than Earth at the center of the universe,
And He was so wrong
Sorry, but he was not polish. The Wiki article seems to have been edited.
@@dfdhfhgj what the hell man. Why are you saying he was not Polish???
@@dfdhfhgj U ARE I IDIOT
Centre of our Galaxy not the Universe.
He's so passionate and curious about our place in the universe. He's the new Carl Sagan.
I wouldn't go as far as to say that, but it's your opinion. He's just a good narrator and researcher.
UnchartedSky Extremely intelligent as well.
@@-UnchartedSky- And that is your opinion as well. Try not to be so negative next time, kiddo. 👍🏼
@@madisonbrown8851 Saying that some youtube dude who narrates science stuff shouldn't be compared to Carl Sagan who was a fucking genius is negative? How so, kiddo?
Lel.
I absolutely love the way you sound, your voice and pronouncement of words are just absolutely soothing to my ears
Trust me it’s his British accent
@@EK-sv9iq I'm British and have the same accent, trust me, it's not just that. He's a great science communicator. I'm sure he would be every bit as amazing with an American accent! ;P
I'd like to hear him say "cheeseburgers"~🍔👍
I am so glad many others feel the same as me... and I thought it was the blunt... {crickets}
@@worklion50 my man 😂💯
As far as we can tell, for the vast majority of the history of life on Earth, it was single-celled organisms. Multi-cellular life might be extremely rare.
I think that is the case. But for some reason once multi arrives, it sure gives a show.
what you talking about, 4000 years ago people rode dinosaurs to work
N Strat Yes! And back then, our cell phones were made of wood and we'd have to make our own 'clicking' sounds when we were pretending to text. Contact lenses were also made of wood back then and splinters made them difficult to wear so we had to sand them very carefully and, well-being opaque-they made riding the smaller and faster dinosaurs quite unsafe. (Sssso glad they invented insurance soon thereafter...) Working under unicellular bosses did nothing for our job satisfaction back then but you sure could pack the little bastards into the boardroom like nobody's business. It was a bad day when you stepped on a whole team of executives because your contact lenses were of a denser hardwood under your sucky benefits and your dino wiped out on the way home all because you were texting your frustration into a small piece of wood when you should have been watching the road. 'Good old days, my ass': we really do have it good nowadays…
@@nstratford9073 yabba dabba doo
U are correct earthling👾😃
Not only your contents are extremely interesting and they provide deep thought, but your narration has the beauty of poetry. It's unusual for a science channel to have this beautiful combination of content and narration (I don't mean to diminish other science channels, they are great too, but their narrated approach is more direct). One of the best channels out there, no doubt.
BTW Copernicus was a Polish astronomer, not German. Interesting video as usual. Thanks
Lol As a proud polish person that was hard to hear 😠😤
Well. It's not easy to determine his nationality in modern terms. Generaly he was a German speaking Polish citizen.
@@MichaelMajeran true Poland and Germany have a very complicated history we've been invaded by them multiple times so a lot of poles were and are accustomed to the language places like Silesia still have German influence to this day
Thank you very much professor! It's awesome to learn all this from someone with 100% passion. I've never ever had a teacher that cared so much about the subject, and that makes a world of difference
I have no doubt in my mind you hear this a lot, but I want to explicitly mark your work here as exceptional. The respect I have for you and your team is massive and I have watched everything on your channel multiple times in awe. Please make sure you find someone as inspiring and capable as yourself to keep this channel going and growing as you in hopefully a long time from now will retire. The importance of your work here is as great as the universe. The importance of reporting your findings without any intermediaries, specifically the precision and agility it allows, we can't be without.
This is a wonderful & clear explanation as to how life on this planet, in this Universe has absolutely nothing to do with religion, and everything to do with the 'roll of the dice'.
Your videos are all so beautiful, poetic, intelligent, and thought provoking. The video Earth's life from start to finish even brought tears to my eyes and left me in awe. I'm so glad I found your channel.
Agreed~
I think our sun is rare, and that combined with what getting hit by Thea did for our planet makes it a quite unusual place.
Great informative video! And thanks for including the fascinating saga of the Kepler mission. I hadn't read about all of the challenges that it had to face.
If you can't see how special the whole arrangement of this huge machine, you wouldn't believe it actually exists.
Everything is perfect for life.
No mistakes.
Also the sun burning for billions of years, it should have changed or run low on fuel, but what we will learn is that the whole universe is a huge machine, and energy goes wireless to where there is need and where it is abundant.
The possibility of all these factors going on with out a glitch, the moon being at the right place, the sun being at the right place and continuing to work as it has for billions of years.
We don't see the picture yet because we believe that it is good chances, nothing is as long lasting to be chance.
Loved the video as usual but Copernicus was Polish. As a Polish person it hurt my soul when I heard you saying “German” 🙈
Sincere apologies, we added a correction to the description, closed captions and as a drop down card annotation at 2:30!
Cool Worlds oh that’s so nice! Thank you ! Will keep on following you. Love your content 😊
Also please note that depending on the time in history Poland has been both German and or Russian. My family history is "germanic" but the ancient family castle is located in what is now Poland.
What did the car say when it hit the telephone pole? Why are you so polish?
Oh yes our sun continues to amaze us with its warmth and life giving rays...an amazing video as ever.
Scientifically researched unlike many other sensationalised RUclips channels.
A very thought provoking premise that both the Sun and the Earth are rare cousins...and that we are the custodians and tenants of life in this cosmological event...
Amazing video...Amazing narration.
Keep these videos coming.
Dear Mr Kipping, thanks for the presentation. Just like your other video on whether we are alone or not in the vastness of the universe, so too, in this one your presentation is superb and you manage to keep "neutral". I was expecting though to see towards which side you are leaning but no avail. I did come to the conclusion that the sun is rare, the earth is rare and we are unique and alone; based on your presentation. "The sun ripens a bunch of grapes as if it had nothing else in the universe to do (Galileo Galilei)" Thank you again.
Love your videos, huge respect! We need more people like you ❤️❤️❤️🇱🇹
Video is very interesting, I am glad to have valuable content like this on YT. Thank you for spotting and correcting Copernicus origin as he was born in Poland (Torun - there is university named after him) and died in Poland, and as a Polish astronomer he has contributed to the changes which are affecting our lives even today. Apart of Polish he spoken German, Italian, Latin and Greek. This made him open-minded. Great respect, I love the channel. 👍
In Polish - Mikołaj Kopernik
One of the other ways in which it appears we may be "special" has been the discovery that we are in a void. A void being a region of space in which the density of galaxies is low, very low. Not only do we live in a void but our void is a super void meaning that it is a lot bigger than "normal" voids. And not just any super void, the largest super void in the observable universe. This presents the problem that our measurements of how fast the universe is expanding may have been thrown off by living in an unusual part of the universe.
If the universe is expanding and we can't travel back and forth even at light speed.
.
I assume.
Early life had a choice.
Go with the flow, or fight the tide.
.
But contextually since this is space, would it not be easier to just travel inward to the "center" since it is traveling towards you.
.
If u travel away it might be more difficult or easier.
.
The defining factor, the direction your galaxy travels and where the big bang emminated from.
.
The real question.
Where do we stand from the center.
.
Is life emminating from a circular safe zone from the big bang?
Or is it a time thing.
.
If life existed before us and is out there.
Would we find more in the edge or towards the center?
A bigger void than the bootes void?
thank you. we need more channels like these
I only just found your channel, absolutely compelling, as a child Carl Sagan switched on my mind with his series Cosmos, your channel has awoken those same thoughts and feelings in me. Thank you for taking the time to make this content and for being a superb educator.
Absolutely love this, more, more, more please, I'm so humbled to understand we are star dust
The work that the team is producing here is really incredible. It's so uniquely creative and innovative.
Many arguments have been made about what constitutes a definition of life over time. From self-replication to carbon-based chemistry, etc. Although one that has always struck me as the broadest catch-all conception is that on all levels-life seeks out and thrives in low entropy environments. Almost as if the raison d'etre of life is to forever fight entropy. Indeed, a low entropic star like our Sun fits this conception of where life might find a hospitable home quite perfectly.
Though order can be seen in natural formations throughout the universe; it's difficult to conceive of discovering extrasolar life without a low entropic signature of some sort. In this vein, it seems that this conception is where we should really begin our search for extrasolar life: low entropic stellar and galactic environments.
This idea, in particular, got me thinking-about Hoag's Object (PGC 54559) and the Terrascope concept. I can't recall ever seeing such an ordered structure in all of Astronomy. Indeed, some of the largest constructions ever created by our species throughout history have been observatories. Could it be that Hoag's Object is a massive galactic lens structure? With the outer ring forming a kind of aperture that can be manipulated? It's often conceived that the manipulation of matter would be a telltale sign of life, but what about the manipulation and structural management of empty space as well?
Absolutely loved the setting used for filming! Greenery, chirping birds! Such a right decision, even if caused by the current situation - this puts at the center the very thing that the video talks about, the sun and all the life it creates here on Earth.
Also, your voice is so comforting! Perfect for the calm discussion of science, especially study of such grand scales. It puts me in a trance-like state, but not like a sedative, just calms a mind immediately - to listen, to think and to remember what really matters.
Thanks! It’s always tricky with lighting and audio outside, especially as someone who’s trained in astronomy and not cinematography! But I personally really enjoy a change of scenery and getting some fresh air for filming.
What you have done (by yourself !), is what is known as ‘film magic,’ lol, & man, there are reams of ‘info,’ & ideas, written about it !!! &, you have such wonderful info, to impart ! 💜✨🔆🌎. [Early filmmakers, before advent of ‘sound,’ had to be ‘inventive,’ & some were great masters at it, ref. modern film ‘Hugo,’ about the early filmic wizard, Georges Melies, played by Ben Kingsley... for example, lol, film & astronomy, are 2 great loves of my own ! ]. I Love what you have given us here. Thank you, most sincerely.
Yes, I also like to see videos filmed outside. As I spend several hours of nearly every day either gardening or out walking, makes me feel right at home while listening to a subject that's interested me since a young child.
I'm sure others have already commented this but Copernicus was Polish! Haha
His non-latinized name was Mikolaj Kopernik. If I am not mistaken, he played a pivotal role in pushing heliocentrism into an accepted principal of our solar system, much to the chagrine of the Catholic Church.
Easily the best channel on RUclips! Outstanding videos.
This is the best channel on RUclips. Hands down. Interesting mix of history, scientific depth, incredible narrative, storytelling and excellent videography. Well done Cool Worlds. Bravo. 👏👏👏
Our gentle Sun has given us a special home. Let us take care of it.
Yes piggypiggy pig. We have been given an amazing amount of 'The right Place at the Right Time'. We are tremendously luck to be here. And look at the news now. With all those advantages we've been given, hate is the God we have chosen.
@@Ron4885
Marxism has created self destructive behavior. The sun, moon and earth will be here long after the enemies of humanity are stomped into ground.
“Take care of it”....what could we possibly do to it?
How?
I really love the sun too. I think it's a great thing, but, take care of it? I really don't think it needs our help! LOL!
The first minute of this is magical. It succinctly breaks down our Sun beautifully.
A correction.
It doesn't take 8 minutes for a photon to go from the sun's core to the earth.
It can take up to a 100000 years to go from the core to the surface.
It then takes 8 minutes from the surface to the earth.
Noticed same error as well. Or more like omission.
Takes 7 to 8 mins for a photon to leave the surface and reach earth
it is fascinating how things that are vital for us can be dangerous and deadly at the same time. Instead of seeing the forces of nature entirely negatively, we should remember that they are part of a larger system that guarantees our lives.
Hi, writing from Toruń, birthplace of Mikołaj Kopernik. Bit offended that you called him German. Great videos BTW, I really love them.
Tomek - nie ogladales Seksmisjii?... "Kopernik byla kobieta"! ;-) Moze sie czlowiek zle wyslowil, chociaz podejrzewam, ze to cos gorszego. A moze po prostu nie CoolWorlds nie lubi Kopernika? lol Pozdrawiam.
It's hard not to be seduced by the romantic idea that we are in fact in a special place in the universe. Well, believe it!
Isaac Arthur showed me that there's no such thing as infinity, not in our universe. The possibility space is just as limited as the possible position of an electron within an atom, the number is just much bigger. That same idea also proves to me that we are indeed special (there is only one portion within that possibility space that you can inhabit, and you're in it!) and should be thankful for our special experience - it's completely unique and every single one of us has that while we look upon the world/stars/universe with our own very unique eyes.
Love the content, professor.
James Conroy regardless of what Isaac Arthur said there is such a thing as infinity, it’s a well defined mathematical concept, and materializes in our universe, for example a black hole singularity has infinite density
denislemenoir The idea that black holes have infinite density is nonsense. Conceptual ‘infinity’ exists. You can travel forwards on the surface of a sphere indefinitely, for example, but that isn’t the same thing as infinite possibility in an infinite universe. That’s not possible in our universe. It’s a finite space with finite possibilities. If you extend the observable universe by something like 10^65, you start to repeat because at that point, every possible position of every piece of matter has been seen already. Therefore, infinity at the cosmological level isn’t possible - we live in a finite possibility space. BTFO
Another fascinating 'special' piece that we've started to come to understand recently is the structure of our solar system. This may be a bias of them being easier to find, but we've found a LOT of solar systems where the 'inner system' (i.e. the Goldilocks zone) is filled with a couple massive gas giants, Jupiters or larger. No rocky worlds that might host liquid water and life there, at least not as independent planets. And even rocky, Earth-sized moons are likely uninhabitable, between the gas giants' radiation belts, the gravitational flux commonly seen in such moons in our system, and the extended periods of total solar eclipse as the moon moves into the shadow of the giant.
Our system has no such 'inner giants', and instead seems to host a slew of 'outer giants', something we again haven't seen in many systems yet. It is theorized that these 'outer giants' acted as asteroid shields during the more chaotic periods of the early system, allowing life an earlier start on Earth than it may otherwise have enjoyed.
Interesting for sure
Ive always been curious about gas giants, i mean wouldnt they just expand or disperse quickly rather then become a huge planet?
There is evidence that suggests that Jupiter was on an inward spiral towards the sun also but Saturn actually pulled Jupiter back to the outer solar system!
There’s a lot of info on this subject, don’t stop with one . Even after 70yrs I have new questions , and questions never stop
I love your videos, this one was AMAZING. Plus your voice is so incredibly relaxing!!
That's what I said...I be in a trance almost going to sleep lol
@@iamBlackGambit Bob Ross: "Zzzzzz..."
Yes his voice gives extra quality to the content.
He sounds like Neil Tennant from Pet Shop Boys. I expect him to say "West. End. giiiirls" at any moment.
droid call the police there’s a madman around..running down underground...
Thank you Cool Worlds team for yet another gem. Great topic. And by the way love the outdoor wooded setting for the video. A refreshing change from having to look at everyone's home office! Stay safe and keep the great work coming...
There's something about this guy's explanation of things. I've recently stumbled upon his videos, and I'm hooked.
Malmquist bias has the auto caption of "Mom Quiz Bias" and I love it.
Thank you, Dr. Kipping, for another excellent presentation! I have believed that “Rare Earth” is probably correct . It seems that “Rare Sun”, as far as we now know, applies as well….
Are we not special for existing at all? The fact that there is something rather than nothing is mind blowing to me
"We live on a vast surface beneath which we cannot see." Such artistry.
the only way anyone can dislike the videos on this channel are being someone who doesnt believe there's something beyond this world (no judging here... not right now at least..). It must be wonderful being instructed by professor Kipping..
I've said it before, but thank you SO MUCH for this channel and your efforts in making it.
It captures my imagination absolutely! Please keep these amazing videos coming!!
Thanks! Bit slow this month with teaching restarting here at Columbia but should be back to videos next week
@@CoolWorldsLab thanks for your reply! 😁
I'll keep a look out for those new videos! 👍
I think this is my favorite channels on all platforms! You guys deliver us such great content, i almost feel myself a professor already, just by taking in your wisdom.
When I was young the Sun was yellow...Now it'is bright white. Why?
Atmospheric scattering of light.
You've been staring at it too long.
Was the snow also yellow when you were young?
ruclips.net/user/Suspicious0bservers
Just wanted to say thank you . A refreshing dose of honesty !
Man I wish I had the brains and/or the money to study under you at Columbia.
I am not even close to anything a scientist but my god he sure explains it to the core. Plus it's asmr to my mind. I think more when I hear him. Good job doctor. Keep up the good work. Enlighten us commons more about things we don't know.
I love your shows and think you're a brilliant scientist. I have also always thought maybe it's our sun that's different and why there is life here. Not the earth necessarily.
this isn't the channel we wanted, but this is the channel we needed.
Your videos never fail to amaze me. Thank you for making this!
It would be very nice if the Copernicus error was fixed by a small edit of the video sound. Still, thank you for the correction...
Great Demotions, what a great, humbling term!
I heard Randall Carlson recently explaining that earth has gone through a very stable and quiet period since the last ice age. Explaining why civilisation has been able to prosper and progress so far in this time. Long may it continue 🤞
Interesting video, thanks.
Would detailed observations of our 'solar siblings', HD 162826 and HD 186302 confirm or deny how rare the Sun is?
However im also wondering why NASA don't review or research deeper on the nearer Yellow dwarf star named Tau Ceti which is only 12 lightyears away on our solar system..
Its mass is 79% of sun and Luminousity of 65-70% of our Sun,it has three Rocket world (4 Planets confirmed)and two of those Rocky world were potentially Habitable, accordingly it was 7Billion years old(3Billion years older than our Sun)yet it still Cooler and dimmer than our sun cause its it has slightly less mass than our sun means it will live stable for another 2Billion years..
In my Opinion why not NASA put their heads on to Study Tau Ceti since its similar to our sun and has also a massive solar system similar to our own
I’m more amazed at everything that comes together from the Earth that allows us to exist.
Thats what makes this planet so rare and unique
Questions. What is the true age of the sun relative to us due to its gravity? Do the sun flares we see occur much slower from the sun’s perspective?
I don't think the sun is massive enough for time dilation to be a significant factor.
I came to hear your poetic voice again. Admirable research and narration
The fault lies not in ourselves but in our stars. I see what you did there.
Sir You explain "Stuff" with greatest of ease that a person with degree in Architecture and who wanted to be a Doctor understands it.
(I wanted to be An Astronaut at age five🙃)
I fell in Love with this Magnificent- Magical-Motherly Universe all over again.
One of the best and most underappreciated channels on RUclips by a long shot
This channel is pure gold
How can someone dislike this typeG professor.. THANK U for yr video! I want more;)
The dislikes are flat earth believers
maybe someone was up set over finding out we not special! or brokenhearted over finding out we are mediocre! it is hard for some to trade in hubris for humility.
Who else instantly hits the like button before watching a Cool Worlds video because you already know you will love it and don't want to forget?
I was raised being told that the sun is unremarkable and typical and average. And that Pluto is the 9th planet from the sun. I'm overwhelmed by all these changes. I need some stability
oi- we all do bud- we all do
@Rob Max
No u
Kopernik was Polish. Very important fact I would argue. Other then that, brilliant video. Thank you
Well seeing no one else has ever found anything remotely like earth , or life , I think we are special. But maybe pointless. Just a distraction on a frequency..
I now preemptively like these videos before I've even seen them. They're always interesting and I'm lapping them up.
You deserve more subs, amazing!
"The universe was adapted from the beginning to give rise to life and intelligence." I read this 40 some years ago in Readers Digest. That is, what good is a wondrous creation without intelligent beings who are able to look at it and contemplate it. To be able to 'enjoy the view.' And now with all the telescopes, it is indeed one hell of a view!!
I ask this humbly, as I have no science background, but from my uneducated standpoint, is it possible that the 'Rare Earth' and 'Rare Sun' hypotheses exist co-dependently? I mean to ask.. is it possible the Mars sized object that crashed into Proto-Earth which purportedly created the Earth and Moon as we now know them to be also coincidentally occurred within the reach of a 'Rare Sun'? Can a 'Rare Sun" give rise to life simply by being a 'Rare Sun'?
How far out can we reasonably extrapolate this effect? Rare Sun, Rare Earth, Rare Solar system, Rare Quiet Spot on an Outer Arm of a Rare Galaxy in a relatively quiet parcel of space......? Could crunching these numbers give us a better idea of the possibility and possible locations of intelligent life?
I apologize for my naivete in these matters. I cannot speak intelligently about physics or mathematics or the like, though I wish I could. Your presentations of the workings of the Cosmos are captivating, to say the least. What intrigues me are the pattern repetitions in nature that seem to apply equally in the macro and micro worlds. Given the equilibrium Einstein's theory of relativity gifts to everything outside of a singularity, is it too far a stretch to use our galactic pattern, in its entirety, as the benchmark for where to look for life?
I don't have a science background, but after watching this, it does make me wonder if that is the solution to the fermi paradox. That having a rare earth that orbits a rare sun is so rare, that it only happens once every few galaxies or so.
@@SnootchieBootchies27 Thank you for the like. 'Rare' is a term used so frequently when referring to life on this planet and our planet itself. I think the math is going in the wrong direction. If you add up the rarity factors it would show how impossible it is that we are here. And yet here we are. Phx Bias
@@PhoenixBiasAmberBiasMusic
Bad news: "The ability to retain an atmosphere is related to the magnetic field, which is also driven by internal heating. Prof. Primack noted that the heavy elements crucial to radiogenic heating are created during mergers of neutron stars, which are extremely rare events. The abundance of uranium and thorium appear to be key factors, possibly even another dimension for defining a Goldilocks planet."
I believe Nicolaus Copernicus was Polish, not German.
Yes, he was Polish...
Possibly the best channel on RUclips.
Prof. Kipling you are a beacon of common sense 👌
I absolutely love your videos; they're so well thought-out and scientifically approached, and the production value is remarkably high
I've never clicked on a video so fast. Excellent as always.
You briefly touched on it in the video, but could it be that the Sun is in a period of low activity currently? Even 9000 years is a short timescale when it comes to the lifespan of a star. Perhaps I'm just grasping to try and make us less special haha
Yes that it possible! We don’t really have a good mechanism to explain such a long term quietness though
@@CoolWorldsLab I wonder if the regolith of the moon could be used to check the solar record over a much longer time period, say millions or billions of years
We do know that the Sun probably hasn't had any flares large enough to strip Earth of its atmosphere within the last few billion years, at least not any that have hit Earth. That puts an upper limit on the past activity level.
@@ergohack That's a very interesting point, I don't think I've seen any upper limit inferred from that point. Although usually with atmospheric stripping from flares, the risk is for M-dwarf planets due their much tighter habitable zones
@@ergohack is there a way to figure out what the likelihood would be of such an event striking the Earth if they were to occur?
Regardless of commonality, our Earth is special; We are special. It's past time we start behaving so.
I absolutely love his work 🙏🏾great job!!
"At the end of time, a moment will come when just one man remains. Then the moment will pass. Man will be gone. There will be nothing to show that we were ever here... but stardust. "
- Pinbacker
The fact there isn't any earth analog in our own solar i.e a rocky planet with a large moon is terrifying in itself. Now that astronomers are scaling out to extrasolar systems and seeing that not only are earths rare, but also sun like stars it is really eye opening.
Josh M And there’s also the fact that we are in a stable orbit in the right part of the galaxy. Not too close to the center, with lots of radiation, but not too distant, where stars tend to be metal poor (and thus have fewer of the elements needed for a rocky planet like Earth.
I enjoy the idea that we aren’t typical as much as I would otherwise. Both are miraculous in their own right.
Hey! You're outside today! Loving the scenery in the background man.