Astronomers Create the Biggest 3D Map Of the Known Black Holes (Quasars)
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 30 май 2024
- Get a Wonderful Person Tee: teespring.com/stores/whatdamath
More cool designs are on Amazon: amzn.to/3QFIrFX
Alternatively, PayPal donations can be sent here: paypal.me/whatdamath
Hello and welcome! My name is Anton and in this video, we will talk about the biggest 3d map of the universe and the quasars we know of
Links:
iopscience.iop.org/article/10...
astro.wku.edu/astr106/Hubble_i...
itu.physics.uiowa.edu/labs/ad...
Quasar navigation: • Surprisingly, Black Ho...
New map of the universe: • Incredible Map of the ...
#quasar #astronomy #map
0:00 Incredible new map
0:50 History of quasar discoveries
1:50 Why quasars were so strange
3:50 Mystery of how they produce energy
5:00 How they most likely work
6:10 Their importance in cosmology
7:30 How we use them today for science and technology
8:20 New insanely large map
9:00 What these discoveries mean
10:00 Future studies and conclusions
Support this channel on Patreon to help me make this a full time job:
/ whatdamath
Bitcoin/Ethereum to spare? Donate them here to help this channel grow!
bc1qnkl3nk0zt7w0xzrgur9pnkcduj7a3xxllcn7d4
or ETH: 0x60f088B10b03115405d313f964BeA93eF0Bd3DbF
Space Engine is available for free here: spaceengine.org
Enjoy and please subscribe.
Twitter: / whatdamath
Facebook: / whatdamath
Twitch: / whatdamath
The hardware used to record these videos:
New Camera: amzn.to/34DUUlv
CPU: amzn.to/2LZFQCJ
Video Card: amzn.to/2M1W26C
Motherboard: amzn.to/2JYGiQQ
RAM: amzn.to/2Mwy2t4
PSU: amzn.to/2LZcrIH
Case: amzn.to/2MwJZz4
Microphone: amzn.to/2t5jTv0
Mixer: amzn.to/2JOL0oF
Recording and Editing: amzn.to/2LX6uvU
Some of the above are affiliate links, meaning I would get a (very small) percentage of the price paid.
Thank you to all Patreon supporters of this channel
Special thanks also goes to all the wonderful supporters of the channel through RUclips Memberships
Images/Videos:
ESA/Gaia/DPAC; Lucy Reading-Ikkanda/Simons Foundation; K. Storey-Fisher et al. 2024
ESO/M. Kornmesser
www.jpl.nasa.gov/edu/teach/ac...
Licenses used:
creativecommons.org/licenses/...
creativecommons.org/licenses/...
creativecommons.org/licenses/...
creativecommons.org/licenses/...
creativecommons.org/licenses/...
creativecommons.org/licenses/...
creativecommons.org/licenses/...
creativecommons.org/licenses/... - Наука
I studied MHD at college, and then had the good fortune to find employment with a company which had an excellent librarian. Each month, a copy of Nature would appear. This was eagerly sought for the latest news of quasars, which were hardly understood in those days. Thank you for keeping us up to date.
Set the simulation up, take a 1 week ciggy break while it runs and read Nature...those were the days...
what is MHD?
@@Corn-Pop. Magneto Hydro-Dynamics
@@Corn-Pop. As mentioned, magneto hydrodynamics. Hannes Alfven got a Nobel for it in 1970. Being Swedish probably helped, as well.
When I was a kid, Quasar was a brand of TV, and no one knew just what they were in astronomy. In Junior High, one teacher had a newspaper clipping on the discovery that most quasars, which wasn't a great number then, seemed to be associated with dim far away galaxies.
Some astrophysicists speculated that quasars were black holes with accretion disks, but others worked the equations and decided there's no way to get *that* much energy like we measure out of such a situation. A black hole with a mass of, for example four billion suns, might have been considered wild back then.
Had no idea we used quasars to synchronize time.
Thank you for another wonderful video Anton.
I am still genuinely confused as to how this wonderful person who brings us a video everyday at 5 or 6pm EST USA doesn't have millions of subscribers and a much larger following. He has the best information and he never fails to hit the nail on the head.
He does tho
Hello wonderful Anton. Thank you for taking the time to put out these episodes! 🇨🇦
Thanks Anton, excellent video. I've loved radio astronomy since I was a kid, but visual astronomy gets all the media coverage.
The images of the SMBHs in M87 and our galactic core were made from radio frequency EM radiation. Those images made headlines around the world.
And few realize how closely intertwined the two have become.
Hi Anton, you have 1.28 million quasars subscribed to your channel 😊
Indeed! We are growing fast! Such a good work is he doing
, ❤❤❤❤
Thanks for the Astonishing Astronomy Lecture - the details …👏👏👏
I love this channel, you have some of the best content on the platform!
Wonderful as always Anton. Thank you. 🙂
Been loving all the black hole/quasar videos lately!!! Thanks!
Much love to ya, Anton! Thank you for this awesome video!
Thanks Anton for this trip through stars and the universe. So glad for your channel and the joy you bring us every day. Love, Love, Love for you and the team ^^
That's a gosh darned bog universe! Has it's own built in quasar lighthouses too, how convenient for navigation...
1.3million light emitting black hole map is bonkers😮
why? space is big.
Awesome!
I hope this map can show something like layers or some other geometry across the universe!
Another fantastic investigation on our known universe 😁🎉
The map looks like the electron orbital of a hydrogen wave function
Hi Anton
, wonderful video! Perfect explanation, so clear! Thank you so much❤❤❤❤❤
Thanks again Anton!
this image of all those black holes, brings me a question about microwave background...
Black holes are more known for their x-ray emissions.
Thank you Anton.
If that map is so big how much room does it take after you fold it up? Glad a paper was written about, sure to be a big seller! Lots of "frequency's," in this episode!
How come the density in the map seems rather uniform? How does that add up to galactic filaments or the age at which these quasars were the most energetic and prevalent?
That's what the universe looks like at the largest scales-isotropic and homogeneous. At least to the level of detail we can currently discern.
The scale where we see the "cosmic web" (superclusters, voids, and filaments) maxes out at about the 100 megaparsec range. Zoom out beyond that and all the variations start to smooth out and look same. It's like looking at a sponge close-up versus from a distance. Even the largest pores become essentially invisible at some point.
They even have a name for it: _The End of Greatness_ .
Very interesting information, thanks 👍😊
Rite Anton Dude, That was super cool n super interesting! TFS, GB :)
I remember reading the German version of Carl Sagan's _Cosmos_ where no less than 6 ideas of what a quasar might be were presented, the 6th of them being about quasars being white holes. The 5th, however, was that which is also accepted today, matter falling into a giant black hole and releasing ridiculous amounts of energy.
In the late 60's, I remember seeing the advetisemts for a TV set called "Quasar." I don't remember if it was B&W or a color TV.
Our TV was B&W.
They made some of best color sets. B&W too. Back in the good old CRT days...
B&W. We had a Quasar at home. All we watched was the original Twilight Zone (black and white), the Outer Limits (black and white), Batman & Robin (black and white), bunch of Westerns, etc. I also remember my dad checking the proper functioning of the "tubes" inside the TV set every 6 months at the local store. Unfortunately our time with the Quasar did not last too long as our dog "peed" behind the Quasar TV and "fried" the circuits 2 years later.
Is it possible to get the source of the music that plays at the end with the list of contributors? I find it very soothing and relaxing.
Me too!
Might try using Shazam to find it.
i asked him on facebook
if i get an answer ill tell ya what the name of the music is
outro is Dreaming Blue - Sextile
only the last part is. its 2 songs put togheter
the first song is unknown@@dububro
Nice images! Yay! Navigation might be possible!
Thanks Anton!
I knew I am in too deep when I just looked at the map at the beginning and it made sense :> thanks for the great videos.
Thank you!
Thanks Anton.
And that does not even count the black holes that are quiet. There must be 10 to a 100 times more of silent black holes.
Can't wait for those elusive future discoveries.
I remember the realization of Black Holes. It was like a barn door opened to reveal a production of Oklahoma going on with a full orchestra!
8:54 Kinda look like one of those electron cloud positions
Very cool
But what about all the Quasars in Goodwill?
And what happened to the remotes?
Its crazy that we navigated hundreds of years ago with Black Holes
I had erorr 404 yesterday. So i couldn't comment on how warp space highways anyor artificial gravity. Has been made a bit closer . Finally getting the concept making quantum vertexes . Or that I've been saying gravity was not A force but the accumulation of all attractive forces.
. Or that something similar to quantum vortex in a gar was discovered at skin walker ranch
Bro, that was US!! 💫
Can I sell you some beans?
Me too, but mine was an error 563. A 563 makes an error 404 look like an error 317.
@@bobdrooplesI have some beans for you right here.
I thunked that too. I eat cheeeeeeeese.
The map looks like a brain. I wonder if the quasars are intergalactic bus stops?
What's incredible is the number of Black Holes, and only Black Holes! Quite an amazing image.
3:50 being a rogue planet anywhere near that Quasar would provide warmth and light for many light years.
Begs the question... is there a habitable zone for rogue planets around quasars?
Would the radiance around Black Hole accretion disc also have habitable zones for rogue planets around them??
No, there’s no habitable zone around an accretion disk that’s millions of degrees, and is also emitting ALL the wavelengths in the spectrum.
A quasar is not a star… is a super massive black hole at the center of a galaxy that’s feeding on matter and is so hot and shines so brightly that is seen 9-10 billion light years away!
I mean you understand what happens to living organisms when exposed to gamma rays or x rays… microwave? Ultraviolet? Even light or infrared… it’s all radiation but turned to 9999 not 11 lol
Even the center of our galaxy with a 4.3 million solar mass Sagittarius A* that is not a quasar and is quite unremarkable compared to other SMB… but all the stars in the core of our galaxy makes life inhospitable for organic forms.
The habitable zone of our galaxy is out here where we are, away from all the “radiation” from the core. Organic life as we know it isn’t meant to be there.
looks like models of atoms.
Only because of the milky way blocking our view along the plane of the galaxy.
ok, so, the whole universe at a distance looks like the electron map of a hydrogen atom
And the empty areas correspond, in both cases, to a zero probability of observation!
8:56
Nope, that's the glow of the milky way obstructing the view
and the way superclusters are interconnected looks like a neuron network
Also bagels are like red blood cells
That picture totally looks like someone scanned their butt on a copy machine. 😂😂😂
I'm sorry. Someone has to say it. The alignment of the map in the thumbnail looks like what happens when you pull your pants down, sit on a photocopier and hit print.
I would downvote this silly immature comment, but (pun not intended) yes someone does have to say it!
We could use this map to navigate, if we were actually capable of interstellar travel ... 😞
Millions of quasars. i knew there were a lot. I just did not occur to me that there were millions.
Funny how it looks exactly like the 2Pz electron orbital.
It looks like a brain. I wondered what the blank spot was... didn't factor in the milky way making us blind in those areas.
I was going to ask why the map looks like a giant quasar in a way with everything broken into 2 hemispheres and the middle like the jets that come out each end... but I was happily wrong. Thanks Anton, you are a very intelligent individual.
Very good morning Gnuida
Somewhere on the otherside of our galaxy a race of aliens have a simular map with the same missing info😅
It does not matter how big this 3D Universe Map is? My wife, will still turn it upside down on our next road trip!😖
Fascinating stuff indeed. And an impressive number as well!
It's a Torus. Nassim Haramein says hello.
A new word Quaia.
Funny that the darkest object possible make the brightest lights in the universe
With all those Quasars out there, should I feel a little bit queasy? You know because of all those big, bloated Black Holes that exist as well 😮…… ⚛️☮️🌏
Thank-you world's governments for financing these expensive projects. The current technology is superb. 🌹I never suspected back in college 50 years ago taking an astronomy course, that we'd be seeing such advances.
Looks like electron orbitals
Nobel prize incoming...
It looks like the electron cloud.
EGOs (extreme gravitational objects)
It’s refreshing to hear you say Taiwan 🇹🇼😊😊😊
It would be negative to the world if that fact was to change.
The whole, not recognising Taiwan or being unable to say Taiwan, freaks me out bad!!!
It’s like not being able to say covid 19.
Science.. yes
Negative Science absolutely.
What is our speed around the super massive blackhole at the center of the milky way,
It takes our solar system about 200,000,000 years to orbit the galactic center where Sgr A* is located at 514,000 miles per hour.
Also note that we are not directly orbiting the SMBH-its gravitational influence is negligible at this distance-but rather the combined center of gravity of the galaxy as a whole.
Remember to look up, that's our home...
Stone trip
⭐️💥
That's a butt! All new meaning to the ass end of space....
Why is the map shaped like that???????
9:18 😂😂😂
Can I really be the only person who doesn't get the basics of universal expansion?
We are looking out and back in time at these distant and very ancient objects located in spacetime close to the beginning of the universe and whether we look in the northern hemisphere or the southern we see a similar pattern. All of this accelerating away from us. There is no suggestion that the most distant stars from us are further away in one direction, ergo we are at the centre of this expansion, which of course is not true. If it were then the oldest matter in the universe would be all around us here.
People have a mental image, which is difficult to shake off, of the Big Bang being an explosion into space. Instead the Big Bang was a rapid expansion of space. Everywhere is accelerating away from everything else. If you were at the most distant object that we can see, you would have exactly the same impression of the surrounding universe (including us) expending in every direction. There is no centre.
Who sat on the photocoiper?
Anyone fancy a bag of cheesy quasars?
I feel you should not show those images, because in some way they are misleading, as they are obviously of different ages and as age increases with distance. My suggestion is that you should use an onion like set of slices of spacetime.
neat
It's starting to make sense how the universe works really, and I'm scared by how obvious it's become.
I bet if you could see absolute zero, it would be a perfect mirror.
Why don't we send a telescope up, p perpendicular to the galactic plane? Then, we could see what the Milky Way is hiding from us. Yes, it will take aa few millennia for it to get into position and several centuries for each picture to arrive, but at least then we would know!
And for those that don’t know, a Quasar is an ancient television from the early universe.
🖖👽
If these quasars can penetrate the Milky Way (you said that's how it was mapped) why can't Gaia map them?
Mapping the 3d location requires seeing more of the spectrum. So while we might detect a quasar on one frequency through the dust, we wouldn't get enough data to pin down the distance, because we need to see has much the redshift is by finding the hydrogen absorbtion lines.
A Tall White Fountain. A blood black nothingness. A system of cells. Within cells interlinked. Within one stem. And dreadfully distinct.
I’m pretty sure the fountain was green
Why does Quaia look so brain shaped?
Woww
Looks like a photocopy of some cheeks
Further to your video of a couple of days ago about a once in a lifetime explosion, do the accretion discs around these quasars ever ignite a thermonuclear explosion? This could happen inside the event horizon so we wouldn't see it I suppose
Why does the video start with him in mid-sentence?
Why do all the maps have the gaps in the middle? Is this a Zone of Avoidance type issue or is it something else I am missing?
The Milky Way gets in the way of some light frequencies.
Ahhh ok, yeah, thanks!
Alot of alot but we don't really know
It looks like the universe is mooning everybody.
Amazing! All praises to Almighty. Thank you, wonderful person, Anton 😊
I love the show but i have to say it. That picture looks like a photo copied butt. Like a 4th dimensional being accidentally bumped into our reality for a second. Lol.
I now know at least one person out there saw it too.
Looks like someone sat on a copier.
I found that alien hiding under my lawnmower. Thanks wonderful dude.
Einstein objected to black holes, but they're in the center of every galaxy. I bet he would be blushing with embarrassment if he was still around to witness the photographs of them.
They are at the center of every magnetic field. Every atom is a magnet with the nucleus being the magnet and the shell being it's field. ⚡🧲➡️🕳️⬅️🧲⚡, ➡️⌛⬅️
@@darylbrown8834 I often wondered what the null point of a magnet was.
@@darylbrown8834 They are NOT at the center of EVERY magnetic field. Atoms are bonded into molecules through the sharing of electrons in their outer shells, not magnetic fields. The universe is not electric. Get over it.
@@darylbrown8834 _"They are at the center of every magnetic field."_
Not according to anyone sane.
Kinda looks like an electron probability cloud lol
Imagine, JWST sees a quasar in 12.8 billion lightyears distance. It sees it in the condition when the universe was only 1 billion years old. Then imagine, the JWST looks into the exact opposite direction and sees also a quasar in 12.8 billion lightyears distance. So how can two quasars appear 25.6 billion lightyears away from each other when the universe was only 1 billion years old and could have only the maximum diameter of 2 billion lightyears? Ergo: the Big Bang theory and the 13.8 billion for the age of the universe are wrong!
Universe expands faster than light. Only thing that is faster than light.