Something Strange Is Happening to the North Star Polaris

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  • Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024
  • Something Strange Is Happening to the North Star Polaris
    ► Subscribe: goo.gl/r5jd1F
    In the vast expanse of the night sky, amidst the many twinkling stars and distant galaxies, there exists a celestial beacon that has captured the imagination of explorers, sailors, and dreamers for centuries. This guiding light, steadfast and unwavering, is none other than Polaris, the North Star.
    But lately there have been some reports that something strange is happening to our guiding light in the night sky. So what is all the recent hype about? We’ll take a look at what researchers are saying.
    Get ready to join us on a mesmerizing cosmic journey to the North Star, and find out what astronomers are now saying about the strange and unknown things happening to Polaris.
    We are on social media:
    / destinymediaa
    The Destiny voice:
    www.TomsVoiceo...
    Sources:
    pastebin.com/r...

Комментарии • 360

  • @davidwalker5054
    @davidwalker5054 7 месяцев назад +73

    All of these stars have been around for billions of years acting normally. But by a strange coincidence they have all started misbehaving at the same time as You Tube surfaced.

    • @FoulPet
      @FoulPet 6 месяцев назад +1

      Guess we've come a long way after proving we aren't the center of the universe and the Earth isn't flat. Minus the nut jobs, of course.

    • @whitehawk68
      @whitehawk68 6 месяцев назад +1

      Yes you are right. profit at any cost . I also see a huge amount of utter garbage on you tube now, so much so I would be very interested in finding a video site where there is NO junk allowed!!!!

    • @clovernacknime6984
      @clovernacknime6984 6 месяцев назад +4

      Haven't you heard? When the stars are right the great Cthulhu awakens and drives mankind to madness. And you have to admit, social media is a pretty solid opening.

    • @FoulPet
      @FoulPet 6 месяцев назад

      @@clovernacknime6984 Biden is a servant of the great old ones.

    • @Nel33147
      @Nel33147 4 месяца назад

      @@clovernacknime6984
      Funny , but true ! 😊

  • @nunyabitnezz2802
    @nunyabitnezz2802 7 месяцев назад +427

    If you’ve been to high school you can start the video at eight minutes.

    • @rafie89
      @rafie89 7 месяцев назад +16

      What if it’s been a few years

    • @c87kim
      @c87kim 7 месяцев назад +12

      Thx

    • @montanausa329
      @montanausa329 7 месяцев назад +7

      Thanks

    • @MRNBricks
      @MRNBricks 7 месяцев назад +52

      If I do that, I won’t have enough time to finish pooping.

    • @swiftmatic
      @swiftmatic 7 месяцев назад +11

      Shucks, I've met hundreds of people, high school graduates, who swear up and down that the Pleiades is the Little Dipper.

  • @richardpark3054
    @richardpark3054 7 месяцев назад +35

    Polaris provides much more than a marker of true north. Its location almost directly overhead the north pole also provides the ability to establish latitude. For example, if you observe Polaris at an altitude of 90 degrees above the horizon (directly overhead), you are at latitude 90 degrees north and you are at the north pole. If you observe Polaris at an altitude of 28.21 degrees, you are at latitude 28.21 degrees north, the latitude of Midway. Which would be incredibly useful to know if you were sailing across the Pacific and intended to land at Midway because you needed more fuel, water and food and would die without them! Mariners knew and exploited the utility of Polaris for centuries. Fixing your latitude in the northern hemisphere is ridiculously simple: all you need is a plumb bob, a protractor, and a clear night sky! Unfortunately, establishing longitude was far more difficult due to its dependence on accurate time keeping. The need for which drove the development of ever more accurate clocks. But that's a different story! Cheers!

    • @veritas2222
      @veritas2222 6 месяцев назад +2

      Nice! 🙏

    • @peterdarr383
      @peterdarr383 6 месяцев назад

      And the Man that perfected the sea-going Clock wasn't paid his $50,000 Pound reward. Cheap bastards !!

    • @richardpark3054
      @richardpark3054 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@peterdarr383Figures!

    • @deemisquadis9437
      @deemisquadis9437 6 месяцев назад

      Yeah, I don't think they trust the north star very much these days. Our wobble is far and fast. Can't define north.

  • @reBorn7458X
    @reBorn7458X 7 месяцев назад +38

    2 min video was stretched to 13 min 🤷🏼‍♂️

  • @johnkochen7264
    @johnkochen7264 6 месяцев назад +26

    I have known how to find Polaris since I was 8 because, back then (1960), we had no social media but we DID have public libraries.

    • @Kaidrawsstuff
      @Kaidrawsstuff 6 месяцев назад

      I've always know about it since I was a kid (im a 2010 kid)and I've always liked reading and I never was allowed on social media until I was 8-9 even then I never rally used it but space as always fascinated me I still read a lot of books about it to this day😁👍

    • @Jen-CelticWarrior
      @Jen-CelticWarrior 6 месяцев назад

      And encyclopedias.😄

    • @Hankyjane
      @Hankyjane 6 месяцев назад

      I was doing that to. I got in trouble because instead of being in a classroom I was reading the sciences at the library

    • @deemisquadis9437
      @deemisquadis9437 6 месяцев назад

      Have fun finding it now.

  • @babalonkie
    @babalonkie 7 месяцев назад +25

    "Nothing in the Universe is impossible!"
    👌

    • @lindaseel9986
      @lindaseel9986 7 месяцев назад +3

      It truly seems that the more impossible something seems, sooner or later, it turns out to be possible.

    • @Digikidthevoiceofreason
      @Digikidthevoiceofreason 7 месяцев назад +3

      Nothing is impossible

    • @littlefurrow2437
      @littlefurrow2437 7 месяцев назад +2

      Said the married Batchelor.

    • @Wildstar40
      @Wildstar40 7 месяцев назад

      Yes the universe somehow brought us here and by the same token the universe will wipe us out. It would seem the universe has a very basic law and that is everything has a beginning, a middle and a end, everything.

    • @SuperAsianboyy
      @SuperAsianboyy 7 месяцев назад

      We live inside a flowers trees

  • @kenmason6135
    @kenmason6135 7 месяцев назад +18

    "The more we learn about the cosmos the less we understand" Truer word have not been spoken, more or less. Thank you for the nice video and graphics, Ken.

    • @TrickOrRetreat
      @TrickOrRetreat 7 месяцев назад

      The more we learn the more we learn. Learning also means removing false learning.
      Semantic i guess

    • @TubeOnRichard
      @TubeOnRichard 7 месяцев назад

      Curious how we build a house of cards on a castle of sand and insist all is durable until a wave comes. Even then many will have an alternative theory of support

    • @markcoleman9892
      @markcoleman9892 7 месяцев назад +2

      I'm well "north" of a half-century old. For me, it's been "the more I learn, the better I understand how much I _DON'T_ know." It seems safe (to me) to assume that the same is true for civilization in general, whether we admit it or not. 🖖

    • @ladyscholar3421
      @ladyscholar3421 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@markcoleman9892yes, Socrates (according to Plato) said something quite similar...many variations of "I only know that I know nothing."

    • @markcoleman9892
      @markcoleman9892 6 месяцев назад

      @ladyscholar3421 In my head, the picture is of a Sisyphian struggle to the top of the mountain, only to look out upon a sea of mountaintops, stretching beyond the limits of eyesight... 😍 🖖

  • @torhildsvendsen9424
    @torhildsvendsen9424 6 месяцев назад +1

    Denne videoen vil jeg se om igjen og om igjen....Takk 😍

  • @richardmercer2337
    @richardmercer2337 7 месяцев назад +9

    Can't wait for Vega -- it's much brighter than Polaris! ...... What's that? Nonsense! I'm going to live forever...

    • @swiftmatic
      @swiftmatic 7 месяцев назад

      Sure, what's a few millennia? 🤣

    • @frankjoseph4273
      @frankjoseph4273 7 месяцев назад

      Vega is among the 10 brightest

    • @richardpark3054
      @richardpark3054 7 месяцев назад +1

      Agreed! 'Death' is for losers!

  • @Ka66ir
    @Ka66ir 7 месяцев назад +31

    Has anyone considered that the reversal of Polaris’ pulsation rate could be caused by an interaction with the galactic magnetic sheet, which is currently undergoing a reversal in our galactic neighborhood? Just a thought. . .

    • @donsly375
      @donsly375 7 месяцев назад +1

      did u just shat your pants?

    • @adreiiaii510
      @adreiiaii510 7 месяцев назад

      ... what?

    • @senilejoe7932
      @senilejoe7932 7 месяцев назад

      Omg are a big dummy it’s global warming 🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬

    • @donsly375
      @donsly375 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@adreiiaii510 he shat his pants

    • @garyfrancis6193
      @garyfrancis6193 7 месяцев назад +1

      Of course. That’s obvious.

  • @tremaincheerful4189
    @tremaincheerful4189 7 месяцев назад +2

    12 minutes 20sec.: Researchers are "trying to get as many measurements in as they can when the stare rotates across our field of view". However, Polaris is the NORTH STAR you fools, it' is ALWAYS in the sky, at the same spot, day and night, if you are in the northern hemisphere. It does not rotate across our field of view at all, nor does any star. The Earth rotates, bringing them into and out of one's sky view.

  • @jagrutbhatt3301
    @jagrutbhatt3301 7 месяцев назад +5

    Very good info👌👍

  • @DanCarsi99
    @DanCarsi99 7 месяцев назад +10

    Great video again! Very captivating

  • @Dave-ty2qp
    @Dave-ty2qp 7 месяцев назад +1

    So in other words, nothing strange is happening to the north star, you just noticed something about it that you didn't notice before.

  • @jus10lewissr
    @jus10lewissr 7 месяцев назад +5

    I don't know if it's due to the fact that I watch similar channels with better content or what, but this video felt severely lacking, especially of any energy, and was far harder to sit through than it should have been. I have no trouble at all sitting through 30-40 minute long videos done by other channels -- containing the same content and information -- without any issues or urges to watch something else. Regardless, this was a two minute video stretched out to 13 minutes that somehow managed to fall short despite being the type of content I find the most intriguing to watch.

    • @evamarx1411
      @evamarx1411 7 месяцев назад +1

      do you have any channel recommendation? I'm always on the hunt for good (astro)physics channels!

    • @charleyhorse6346
      @charleyhorse6346 7 месяцев назад +1

      Couldn’t agree with you more, I didn’t even make two minutes. Thumbs down.

    • @tremaincheerful4189
      @tremaincheerful4189 7 месяцев назад +1

      It's because of using a computer generated text to voice program. You're listening to a robot.

  • @ProJanitor
    @ProJanitor 2 месяца назад +1

    For so long, Polaris has been an invaluable asset to humanity, but never knew it.
    In life, you may never know just how many people regard you as their own North Star ❤

  • @Lot-4656
    @Lot-4656 7 месяцев назад +5

    Thanks again.

  • @SueFerreira75
    @SueFerreira75 7 месяцев назад +1

    We do not know what is happening to the Pole Star now. The Polar Star is 323 light years away, so the light we see today left the star in 1701.

  • @callyman
    @callyman 6 месяцев назад +1

    I've not even watched this and I can tell you it's moved. I look at my compass daily and I can say our magnetic north has moved over 10 degrees in the last 3 months

    • @izzyplusplusplus1004
      @izzyplusplusplus1004 6 месяцев назад

      Not even a joke now. Pole flip is in motion right now.

  • @derekwarr8567
    @derekwarr8567 7 месяцев назад +5

    So what exactly is the strange thing happening?

    • @BigBadLoneWolf
      @BigBadLoneWolf 7 месяцев назад +3

      nothing strange, just that Polaris, from our perspective is slowly moving away from the celestial north pole. it has not been there forever, and it will not remain there forever, at some point in time our north star will be a different star in a different constellation.

  • @mysticdragonwolf89
    @mysticdragonwolf89 7 месяцев назад +2

    My introduction to the North Star was Muppets Treasure Island

  • @johncraig2623
    @johncraig2623 7 месяцев назад +2

    The bowl & handle of the Little Dipper asterism is not always left of Polaris. That's kind of a bizarre suggestion to look for it left of Polaris to find the Little Dipper.

  • @JohnDouglasCrowtin-pr4ft
    @JohnDouglasCrowtin-pr4ft 7 месяцев назад +5

    Could our atmospheric density or whatever effect the observation?

    • @M-e-t-a-l-l-i-c-a_fan
      @M-e-t-a-l-l-i-c-a_fan 6 месяцев назад

      Polaris was always faint from the south of the UK where I live, thanks to LIGHT POLLUTION

  • @kentwhoo
    @kentwhoo 6 месяцев назад +1

    When finding Polaris, you’re able to triangulate it by adding Cassiopeia in that way you mentioned by using the Pointer Stars of the Big Dipper. Use the middle three stars of Cassiopeia, but using the natural curve of that line. With that, & the Big Dipper Pointer Stars, you can always find north. Or, at least have a good idea when there is heavy cloud coverage. This also helps when there is only one of the three that are visible.

  • @HealthyHomeGardening
    @HealthyHomeGardening 6 месяцев назад

    According to the theories in the book, Time Waves on the Shores of Forever, this is caused by the companion stars, which are more massive than they appear. When they approach Polaris A, it causes it to dim because of gravitational ressonance, which shrinks stars..

  • @garyfrancis6193
    @garyfrancis6193 7 месяцев назад +1

    As the old saying goes “ Never rely in a Cepheid Variable”.

  • @ronanzann4851
    @ronanzann4851 6 месяцев назад +6

    This is one of the most comical videos that I've seen regarding stars. You FINALLY made a statement that was true when you announced that you don't know how large Polaris is, or how far away it is. As for everything else you have said......(BUZZER) ! Wrong !

  • @littlestonliest1186
    @littlestonliest1186 7 месяцев назад +3

    "Destiny" states that Cepheid variable stars, like our North Star have their distances from Earth precisely calculated using the 'Stellar Evolution Model.' On the other hand, because of the variable nature of Polaris, the distance can not be measured precisely. Perhaps "Destiny" forgot the North Star & Polaris are the exact same star.

  • @TJonLongIsland
    @TJonLongIsland 6 месяцев назад +1

    Video begins at 8:04

  • @Bob-b7x6v
    @Bob-b7x6v 7 месяцев назад +2

    A beating, magnetic stellar heart.

  • @billweaver6092
    @billweaver6092 7 месяцев назад

    Strange that we’ve heard nothing from the countless thousands of professional astronomers around the planet.

  • @KyleWaisanen
    @KyleWaisanen 7 месяцев назад +3

    What is the South Star?

    • @montanausa329
      @montanausa329 7 месяцев назад +3

      There is not one

    • @rickkwitkoski1976
      @rickkwitkoski1976 7 месяцев назад +2

      @user-hn2fp9cw7p There is that Southern Cross. Look it up. You can determine the South Celestial pole with that.
      Try wikipedia. That's a good basic place to start.

  • @terryvalentine369
    @terryvalentine369 7 месяцев назад +1

    It’s called the ranger, Polaris makes them, usefull and fun to drive 👍

  • @johnslugger
    @johnslugger 7 месяцев назад +2

    *I can never find the North Star.*

    • @blackholeentry3489
      @blackholeentry3489 5 дней назад

      First, find the Big Dipper. The two stars in the bowl, opposite the handle, point directly to Polaris......the North Star, which is about five times the distance between the Pointers.

  • @jenniecosio3654
    @jenniecosio3654 6 месяцев назад +1

    This is so awesome 😎😎

  • @musicluvr70
    @musicluvr70 6 месяцев назад +2

    Something strange is happening to the North Star, Polaris, and they still don't know what it is, but they will make a few wild guesses... after they give you an 8 minute lesson on where it's located and how people of ancient times used it to guide them.

  • @craigthescott5074
    @craigthescott5074 7 месяцев назад +4

    Is there a planetary system around Polaris ? Or Polaris A and AB?

  • @hereticpariah6_66
    @hereticpariah6_66 7 месяцев назад +2

    Interesting...🤔.. I'll subscribe and see how it goes..

  • @northphoenix5852
    @northphoenix5852 6 месяцев назад +1

    🌟 The esiest way to find Polaris is by using a compass. Face North, the brightest star is him. To verify, your brightest star must be the last star on the handle of the small dipper. w/out a compass, find the big dipper use it's pointer stars as instructed by Destiny, the first bright star on it's line of sight will be Polaris, being the last on small dipper's handle, confirms his identity.

  • @rayoflight62
    @rayoflight62 6 месяцев назад

    Excellent video.
    Little problem... The audio is somewhat distorted, the narrating voice seem to be hissing in some parts of the video...

  • @yosefsc
    @yosefsc 7 месяцев назад +1

    thanks very interesting

  • @gregbrenner7557
    @gregbrenner7557 7 месяцев назад +2

    The Big Dipper is not a constellation.

  • @asanablue
    @asanablue 6 месяцев назад

    This is one of the.most major player in the universe. 🌠

  • @glomerol8300
    @glomerol8300 7 месяцев назад +4

    First-rate as always, but I also appreciated the perfect little lesson to find the north star, as I've been meaning to learn them slowly/casually on my own. So that's Polaris and the big and little dippers and, on my own, Orion with its Betelgeuse, so far.
    Thanks, Destiny.

    • @Guido_XL
      @Guido_XL 7 месяцев назад

      Polaris is part and parcel for amateur-astronomers on the Northern Hemisphere to get their telescope properly aligned. Modern systems seem to take that effort more and more out of the user's hands through software-aided instruments, but I simply like the old-fashioned method of doing it myself.
      My telescope-mounts have a small auxiliary telescope tube inside of them. I first need to ensure that this small tube is properly aligned to the mount's axes. When preparing a nightly session, I first need to learn the time at which Polaris will cross his transit. I can look this up from some public online sites, e.g., Stellarium.
      My auxiliary scope reveals a reticle that contains a circle, like a clock dial. When I peek through it, I see that reticle and the dial against the background of the night sky. Knowing at which time Polaris crosses his transit, tells me where I have to expect Polaris' relative position on the reticle. It's like a celestial clock, where Polaris is at the end of the small hand, so to say. The actual Northern Celestial Pole (NCP) is not on the same position as Polaris, but in the center of the dial (it changes slightly and gradually from year to year, but the dial tries to show that too).
      Like all celestial bodies, Polaris travels around that NCP during a day, in which the Earth rotates around its axis. So, I align my telescope mount in such a way, that I will perceive Polaris on the reticle's dial circle, exactly where it is supposed to be, knowing where it was when it crossed the 12 o'clock position on the dial. If I'm preparing my setup, let's say, 8 hours after that transit time, I know that Polaris has to appear on the dial at 2 o'clock.
      Why 2 o'clock? Because the small auxiliary scope represents the image upside-down, as every refractor does. So, 12 o'clock appears as 6 o'clock to me, when I'm looking at the reticle. Then I calculate: 8 hours after this 6 o'clock position on the dial equals 2 o'clock on the dial. That's where I want to see Polaris, so I tweak the mount's knobs so as to make this happen.
      When I do this precisely, this kind of alignment is pretty good, allowing for long exposures that do not show any star trailing, due to the Earth's rotation.
      By the way, the reason as to why I subtract 4 hours (half of 8 hours) from the 6 o'clock position in a counter-clockwise rotation, is because that is the direction in which celestial bodies seem to rotate around the NCP. And it's 4 hours instead of 8, because the imaginary clock-dial represents 12 hours, whereas a day lasts 24 hours. So, a time difference of 8 hours is represented by half of this amount of time on a dial.
      This all may sound very complicated if you hear it for the first time, but once you get used to the astronomical basics, it all makes perfectly sense and it stops being difficult entirely.

  • @susannebrunberg4174
    @susannebrunberg4174 7 месяцев назад

    If you have lived in northern Europe, you can almost skip the video

  • @josepheaton3779
    @josepheaton3779 7 месяцев назад +16

    The big dipper is an asterisim not a constellation. It's part of Ursa Major.

    • @Icriedtoday
      @Icriedtoday 7 месяцев назад +2

      constellation can also be used generically as "a particular grouping of stars"

    • @josepheaton3779
      @josepheaton3779 7 месяцев назад +5

      @Icriedtoday There are 88 official constellations, the big dipper is not one of them.

    • @richardpark3054
      @richardpark3054 7 месяцев назад

      Thanks. A lot. Well, ok: not really.

    • @M-e-t-a-l-l-i-c-a_fan
      @M-e-t-a-l-l-i-c-a_fan 6 месяцев назад

      ​@josepheaton3779 The big dipper, Great bear or Ursa Major is the largest Constellation in the northern hemisphere.
      Mr. Bear won't be happy!!

    • @josepheaton3779
      @josepheaton3779 6 месяцев назад

      @kevin-qm6gb The Big Dipper is an asterisim, Ursa Major, includes several more stars giving it an chest and head that the big dipper doesn't have. You can research this on many websites or in a library in a book. Muscida, also known as Omicron Ursae Majoris is the nose of the bear, but not part of the big dipper.

  • @justasmallltowngirlll
    @justasmallltowngirlll 6 месяцев назад

    It’s right above me here in Northwestern Ontario Canada. The big diper is right out my window

  • @mikehazel9991
    @mikehazel9991 7 месяцев назад +1

    How does this procession affect temperature here on Earth?

    • @swiftmatic
      @swiftmatic 7 месяцев назад +1

      Assuming that our planet's axial inclination remains roughly the same and excluding other factors, I would think the effect would be minute at worst. However, the solstices and equinoxes would slowly shift in relation to our calendar.

    • @richardpark3054
      @richardpark3054 7 месяцев назад +1

      Not at all.

  • @julliannwinston5308
    @julliannwinston5308 6 месяцев назад

    The Earth's physical structure is behind all this magnetic shifting. The planet's inner core is made of solid iron. Surrounding the inner core is a molten outer core of liquid iron. The next layer out, the mantle, is solid but malleable, like plastic. Finally, the layer we see every day is called the crust. These changes might also cause polarity reversals. Irregularities where the core and mantle meet and changes to the Earth's crust, like large earthquakes, can also change the magnetic field.
    The magnetic North Pole is responsible for more than just the direction a compass points. It's also the source of the aurora borealis, the dramatic lights that appear when solar radiation bounces off the Earth's magnetic field.
    This happens at the South Pole as well. In the southern hemisphere, the lights are called the aurora australis.

  • @germanydietz1984
    @germanydietz1984 7 месяцев назад +1

    I lived in the United States and the sad cuz I don't see no stars at night time

  • @micheleploeser7720
    @micheleploeser7720 4 месяца назад

    If you haven’t gone to the high school in the last 10 years you know more than you would know if you did go

  • @kennethbjorkman2976
    @kennethbjorkman2976 7 месяцев назад +1

    I'M so Sorry, but that star is NOT Polaris!!! If You use AI to do things like this check Your information.

  • @ИльяКонстанта
    @ИльяКонстанта 7 месяцев назад

    Now that I think about it, I have seen stars in years. Living in a big city sucks.

  • @badactor3440
    @badactor3440 7 месяцев назад +3

    Luke 21:25-36;
    “There will be signs in the sun, moon and stars. On the earth, nations will be in anguish and perplexity at the roaring and tossing of the sea. People will faint from terror, apprehensive of what is coming on the world, for the heavenly bodies will be shaken."

  • @1J_R
    @1J_R 7 месяцев назад

    polaris A polaris B why polaris Ab and not C?

  • @AndrewJohnson-oy8oj
    @AndrewJohnson-oy8oj 7 месяцев назад +1

    Our solar system is slowly moving towards Vega. So in about 13,000 years Earth will be travelling through the galaxy north pole first.

  • @narimenrhodes-zh7tr
    @narimenrhodes-zh7tr 7 месяцев назад

    Is that Dominic Keating narrating??😂 Lovex3 ENTERPRISE!!!!🎉🎉😘

  • @techstuf4637
    @techstuf4637 7 месяцев назад

    Ask yourselves why polaris has not moved in accordance with the 'seasonal tilt' for years.
    See - "Huge Media Blackout Regarding Supermoons" on the net
    See - "Pole Shift of Noah's Day About to Happen Again?"

  • @MostlyBuicks
    @MostlyBuicks 6 месяцев назад

    You mean something HAS happened to Polaris. We are just seeing it now.

  • @velcroman11
    @velcroman11 6 месяцев назад

    If there is something strange going on. Call the Ghost Busters!!

  • @tjsastrophotography125
    @tjsastrophotography125 6 месяцев назад

    The big dipper is a asterism not a constellation .

  • @breakthechains5140
    @breakthechains5140 6 месяцев назад +1

    Um... the "Big Dipper" isn't a constellation. It's an asterism. Just say'n... ;)

  • @janskeet1382
    @janskeet1382 7 месяцев назад

    “Ha, but my life is a box of wormgears” 🤖

  • @paulslater9061
    @paulslater9061 7 месяцев назад +2

    It's bound to be because of climate change and net zero 😂😂😂😂😂

  • @kastenolsen9577
    @kastenolsen9577 7 месяцев назад +1

    A good book on how to colonize our solar system is Second Exodus Colony located at the Internet Archives. 😊 All politicians and adminestrators need to read this book. 😮 Download and read. 😊

  • @antonyol.2489
    @antonyol.2489 7 месяцев назад

    I know very little about stars and found this interesting...but it reminded me of something I saw in the sky early last summer and now I wonder if it could be related (though I doubt it). From where I stood looking at the big dipper, a light appeared for what I estimate as close to two seconds, in the middle of second to last and last stars of the dipper handle. It was as if someone switched on then off a distant light bulb. At its brightest, it was like Venus in the middle of the big dipper. It grew then faded quickly, not like an explosion or flash. Anybody have ideas?

    • @hiflyerint8119
      @hiflyerint8119 7 месяцев назад

      Tumbling geostationary satellite?

    • @richardpark3054
      @richardpark3054 7 месяцев назад

      Most likely Bigfoot protecting us by blasting UFO's from the Bronze.

    • @peterhumphreys9201
      @peterhumphreys9201 7 месяцев назад

      @@hiflyerint8119 A tumbling geostationary satellite wouldn't be much use to anybody, though

    • @BigBadLoneWolf
      @BigBadLoneWolf 7 месяцев назад

      meteor exploding in the atmosphere. if it coming straight at you, you wont see a tail

    • @blackholeentry3489
      @blackholeentry3489 5 дней назад

      A meteor, if coming directly at you, will appear that way....although it is a rare event, it does, on occasion, happen.....and is termed a 'point meteror'.

  • @n0xxm3rcyxx
    @n0xxm3rcyxx 5 месяцев назад

    So if we are spinning at an insane amount why. are the stars in the same place every night and have been for as long as they have been charting them?

  • @Originalroninstorm
    @Originalroninstorm 6 месяцев назад

    Sounds like the dude from kurzgesagt...

  • @gowdsake7103
    @gowdsake7103 6 месяцев назад

    Polarised is NOT unmoving

  • @Bob-b7x6v
    @Bob-b7x6v 7 месяцев назад

    Mr. Spock: Fascinating...

  • @RosieRoserules
    @RosieRoserules 6 месяцев назад

    The North Star changes this one will change to another one

  • @hollywiley5668
    @hollywiley5668 6 месяцев назад

    It’s the galactic sheet.

  • @gennaroesposito3578
    @gennaroesposito3578 7 месяцев назад +1

    Uhm. It seems a trouble. Could I do anything?

  • @gahlenfr
    @gahlenfr 7 месяцев назад

    Since it takes approx 434 years for the light to reach us, what we see is not current. Why don't you state that. You state that suddenly something is changing with Polaris when actually it is old data.

  • @sidneywinter8952
    @sidneywinter8952 7 месяцев назад

    You mentioned that the north star can be seen on the equator. At the equator can we see the north star AND the southern cross at the same time? I don't know a whole lot about astronomy and I am eager to lear.

  • @paulalearmond9535
    @paulalearmond9535 7 месяцев назад

    WHAT IS THE AVG AGE OF A STAR LIKE OUR SUN? 10 billion years?

  • @สว่างตากระจ่างใส

    Is the Earth moving closer or farther away from the North Star?

  • @XxSpartan617xX
    @XxSpartan617xX 7 месяцев назад

    Is this the Narrator of the Kurzgesagt YT channel?

  • @scottgarriott3884
    @scottgarriott3884 6 месяцев назад

    12:20 "... when the star rotates across our field of view."
    um ... what?

  • @Bryanvaughn-s4t
    @Bryanvaughn-s4t 6 месяцев назад

    Same time special ed started up in the cleanest atmosphere in the world

  • @Bryanvaughn-s4t
    @Bryanvaughn-s4t 6 месяцев назад

    Hi now chill out now I'm on the very edge of this planet creation

  • @KarenLee-bs5ms
    @KarenLee-bs5ms 6 месяцев назад

    What about a planet could there be one around it

  • @محمدفرحان-ذ1م
    @محمدفرحان-ذ1م 7 месяцев назад

    Amazing as usual 🥰

  • @raykeller6693
    @raykeller6693 6 месяцев назад

    Wow! As a lover of the heavens, I’m Not even interested!

  • @__ZANE__
    @__ZANE__ 7 месяцев назад +4

    north star is a light in the sky and earth is flat

  • @ameliadiaz8040
    @ameliadiaz8040 5 месяцев назад

    Polaris is also known as Polaris Borealis.

  • @mfanasibilimanonankosi778
    @mfanasibilimanonankosi778 6 месяцев назад

    Why is your Earth's rotation clockwise?! 👀 😳🧐🤔

    • @Loza_1703
      @Loza_1703 4 месяца назад

      Wdym “your”?

  • @edazar961
    @edazar961 7 месяцев назад

    How do we know that Polaris isn't a black hole star?

  • @m00nsplitter72
    @m00nsplitter72 7 месяцев назад

    3:56 Wrong. Asterism.

  • @jameswagner2634
    @jameswagner2634 6 месяцев назад

    Well, actually, had it already happened

  • @Bob-b7x6v
    @Bob-b7x6v 7 месяцев назад

    Is it being mined for N-th Metal?!

  • @johnkealy2238
    @johnkealy2238 6 месяцев назад

    Are we going to cut to the chase?

  • @Bryanvaughn-s4t
    @Bryanvaughn-s4t 6 месяцев назад

    Or tracking

  • @Veterans_for_Harris
    @Veterans_for_Harris 7 месяцев назад

    The Borg

  • @scottbuchanan3461
    @scottbuchanan3461 7 месяцев назад

    Blessed north Star polaris, be advise mankinds crazy experiments using my planet trying to have unipoles a present dandgen great Northern Star.

  • @padmanabhaswamy
    @padmanabhaswamy 6 месяцев назад

    You all need to, read and understand, the ancient, Indian, astronomy. Yes, it was taken, by the, west, but, it's the, historical science, that was fundamental to global knowledge.

  • @theomnisthour6400
    @theomnisthour6400 7 месяцев назад

    It makes perfect sense when you know how new versions of time-space are developed and tested in the simulation multiverse

    • @richardpark3054
      @richardpark3054 7 месяцев назад +1

      I'd really appreciate your expanding on that fascinating and (literally) incredible thought!

    • @theomnisthour6400
      @theomnisthour6400 7 месяцев назад

      @@richardpark3054 Basically, we've been the crash test dummies to work the kinks out of a new time-space virtual reality designed to test consciousness quanta and their ideas/identities and sort them according to the Karmic resonances of their individual merkabas for particular spiritual universe afterlife simulations. New souls are born as NPC characters somewhere, somewhen, in some time-space that obeys the laws of that universe's top creator(s), and as they gain experience or "die" move to other incarnation avatars as they pursue their own individual passions, for better or worse.
      Ultimately, souls find a "place just right" where the play level and stresses suit their emergent personality, tranquil heavens for some, hellish matrix movie punishment for others, revisiting the historical or fantasy worlds of the past, or playing some variant of a "Spiritual Star Trek" future.

    • @theomnisthour6400
      @theomnisthour6400 7 месяцев назад

      @@richardpark3054 The radical change in the behavior of such a celebrity star as Polaris is one of many signs we are in a major version transition, another messianic age, where the old cycles and patterns may be broken or shifted. The cosmology crisis is another sign of this

    • @theomnisthour6400
      @theomnisthour6400 7 месяцев назад

      When you're final testing a major or minor version of the game of souls, you replay the 3 critical generations of the inflection point between expansion and corruption and collapse of the previous time-space till all the critical players - messiah candidates - come close enough to how it was conceived in the mind of God, who until the Revelation is the only one who knows who the new messianic blood line is and who the big M Messiah will be, to the great consternation of the groomers of old and new bloodlines of previous light and dark messiahs who only have a vague idea how the messiah shell game works. The Creation stories of all traditional religions carry bits and pieces of the truth that peek out from the cultural and spiritual lenses of the time. The disjoint scriptures didn't make sense till the translation of the Sumerian Enuma Elish tablets and more scholarly translations of the Torah overlaid well with the growing suspicion that we were being visited and subtly communicated with by alien or transdimensional beings that seemed to be planting Easter Eggs for us to find, as virtual reality game programmers do to engage and mold customers behavior, for better or worse. It works surprising like metaverse moguls evvision, only the rewards are spiritual currency, not materialist fame and fortune.

    • @richardpark3054
      @richardpark3054 7 месяцев назад

      Fascinating! Although I'm sure most, if not all, mainstream experimental & theoretical physicists, cosmologists, philosophers, psychiatrists and other space scientists would dismiss your theories as the crazed ramblings of a delusional lunatic (or maybe the delusional ramblings of a crazed lunatic? It's a tough call!), I smell Nobel material! Would you please share with us the titles of some of your publications and the names of the journals in which they were published? I feel compelled to pursue a fuller understanding of your ground-breaking thoughts! Thank you! ​ @theomnisthour6400

  • @Birkelandaurora
    @Birkelandaurora 7 месяцев назад

    All stars are born in a z pinch

  • @JungleJargon
    @JungleJargon 7 месяцев назад

    The earth is flat locally the same as the speed of light is constant locally. Over large distances the earth is not flat and the speed of light is not constant. Light only slows down where and when it encounters the gravity of a galaxy which slows down time and shortens distance.

    • @richardpark3054
      @richardpark3054 7 месяцев назад

      What an amazing theory! I'll inform the physics community immediately that over a century of observation is all ca-ca!

    • @JungleJargon
      @JungleJargon 7 месяцев назад

      @@richardpark3054 How smart are you?
      Scientists need dark matter to make galaxies because they obviously can't form themselves. Matter and energy can’t make or direct themselves. *If you have a different size cubit you will change the size of the house that you build with it.* Lightspeed 186,000 miles per second is how we observe it with a constant rate of time and a fixed measure of distance. Another observer in any other place in the universe also with a fixed frame of reference will see light speed 186,000 miles per second too except the frame of reference is not the same since it will be a different size of 186,000 miles and a different rate of time which alters the speed of light from our reference frame. The significance of this is that when we observe other galaxies in outer space we are not looking at a fixed measure of distance or a single rate of time because time speeds up and distance is stretched the farther away from the center of the galaxy that it is. If we look at something traveling into the event horizon of a black hole, it will look stopped to us because of how slow it is traveling. If we look at something traveling the opposite direction from us away from the black hole, it will be moving much faster and increasing with speed because the rate of time keeps getting faster and the measure of distance keeps stretching more the farther away it is from the center of the galaxy. This is the reason for superluminal motion and the faster than expected speeds of the outer spiral arms of the galaxies. Things appear to be going faster in outer space because they are going faster without breaking the speed of light because of the changes in the rates of time and the measures of distance in general relativity depending on how much gravity there is in the vicinity.
      The truth is that thirteen billion years pass by faster between galaxies where there is no matter or mass to slow down time or contract distance. Light only slows down when it encounters the gravity of a galaxy. To be clear, light never breaks the speed of light. It's just that time passes by faster and distance is stretched where there is no matter or mass to slow down time or shorten distance. This means that the distance is not as far and the universe is not as old from our perspective where time is slower. Redshift happens because of gravity and the accumulation of gravity over large distances so there is no need for a universe expanding into oblivion for no reason. Since things are moving faster away from the centers of galaxies there is also no need for dark matter. Gravity and general relativity explain everything.
      The universe is both older and younger than the earth at the same time.
      There are so many imaginary problems from not understanding the observations. It’s the observations that are real and it’s gravity and general relativity that are not being understood. We don’t need another law of gravity. Gravity is constant locally the same as the earth is flat locally. On a larger scale gravity is not constant and the earth is not flat. Gravity drops off considerably outside of the galaxy which changes considerably the measures of time and and distance which together make everything to appear to move faster including light. Things appear to be moving faster because they are moving faster as seen by us in our slower rate of time and our shorter measure of distance. This eliminates entirely the need for dark matter. The redshift is caused by gravity too.
      The changes in time and distance compound the changes in the speed of light as observed from our frame of reference. Do a thought experiment. Hold your hands a foot apart representing 186,000 miles saying “one thousand and one” representing one second while pretending to see an imaginary photon going from one hand to the other. Now expand the distance saying “one thousand and one” as fast as you can. You should notice that the speed of the imaginary photon increases the more distance expands and the more time speeds up just same as the farther away from the center of the galaxy it is. The opposite is also true. Someone moving in the direction of a black hole will seem to us to be stopped. If you change the size of a cubit you will change the size of the house that you build with it.
      The energy source of the vacuum energy otherwise known as dark energy is from all of the supermassive black holes that are growing by drawing in spacetime. This explains the vacuum energy and it means that the universe is not expanding or inflating into oblivion for no reason. It means there is no need for imaginary inflatons. Redshift occurs when light leaves the gravity of a galaxy and then the light is blue shifted when it enters another galaxy. Obviously galaxies aren’t all equal that way and distant galaxies are much more redshifted because of all of the mass of the surrounding galaxies that distance light has to pass by.

  • @alienscivilization9388
    @alienscivilization9388 7 месяцев назад

    Pivoting the spin time ur earth will do by aliens technique of fitting an air pump whisling up or down at polar axis is idea of conquer ur earth