I was on lunch at work and I had tears on my face. The same thing happened when I saw the "old" Hubbell UDF... ... looking out that far.... is overwhelming. It is impossible to really explain it to people...who don't get it. It's hard to handle that part.... I can't have much of a conversation about it with most of my close people...they just say "oh wow cool"... but... thankfully my coworker is on the same page. Humbled and amazed.... it's not like pointing a telescope at something and seeing way more.... it's pointing a telescope at nothing, and seeing the beginning of everything
I know exactly what you mean! Like this just humbeled me and made me happy. It took my existential anxieties away. We’re nothing and everything at the same time. I hate that most ppl are not into this stuff. Society has done a great job of blocking peoples 3rd eye.
It’s crazy how these images are taken of things unimaginabley far away, and yet, there are still universes as small as grains of sand that are even further than that
Other galaxies perhaps, not universes. As at this time of writing and as far as I know, we only know about this universe. Any other universe is probably not even theorised yet, just speculated on.
@@emanuelgaldes3515 True a working hypothesis only. The math works but I can't see how you can get any real evidence for it to be a theory. But, the same could be said about finding in our Galaxy and Universe. The math suggests there is but it is all a hypothesis at the moment.
humans are exceptionally good at making tools, the JWST is just caveman wheel on steroids unfortunately we can't shake our reptilian brain inclinations.
It's amazing how that kind of "ultra deep field" picture has so many distorted galaxies/stars. The view is so deep that it goes trough so many dense gravitional distortions. And it just seems like a normal picture... now imagine what else is to come
I’m not sure this is a typical view. I think they looked at his area because of the insane gravitational lensing going on that reveals galaxies further away that the JWST would normally be able to resolve - 13 billion light years away. Which is totally awesome. What you’re seeing here is in a sense a telescope looking down a telescope! Wrap your head around that one. : )
I think they just happened to discover that lensing effect after the first hubble 2 week exposure photo. I think I heard they just picked a area of the sky that was completely block and void of stars to our initial vision. Then they just wanted to see what happens when they point it at a dark black void spot that seems empty... Well "the more you know" now we realize there is a ton of galaxies and activity in a area we that was not that full of much at first. (I could be wrong, I'll accept if I'm was incorrect about this. So feel free to mention anything because maybe I'm getting something confused and mixed up lol)
I wasn't overly taken back by the "deep field" view until you said it was an area the size of a grain of sand. Thank you - that put things into perspective for me. Great video!
@@GenSecWPNM That would be like looking directly into the sun with night vision goggles. A sensor like this would be completely useless and impractical on Earth as it is much too sensitive. That is why we had to send JWST 1.5 mio. km away, so it can block out the Earth's radiation. Also it needs to be cooled to close to absolute zero to be able to detect those incredibly faint signals. If you used it on Earth you would only see a white image and the sensor would be quickly damaged and destroyed.
@@michaelhill6451 Yea you're right, I shouldn't have said "exposure". I got that mixed up. But anyway the comparison of 100 hours in 10 days vs 12 hours in 12 hours still stands.
I got really into amateur astronomy around the time they'd started placing the mirrors on JWST... you could watch the assembly on 24h webcams... I just couldn't get enough of the bizarre and mind blowing facts about our universe... And being in a pitch black field with a telescope finding galaxies on my own, contemplating the length of time those photons had been travelling before landing on my mirror and reflecting into my eye inspired such awe, the feeling and experience was almost spiritual. I remember around then it feeling like a LONG long time until Webb would be doing science (thinking about it, this was 10 - 12 years ago)... the first images are spectacular - the choice to redo the deep field is amazing and a a great homage to hubble (that original experiment/exercise and it's result was always my go to anecdote about the universe to express to others what was so magical, exciting and compelling about the pursuit of knowledge and understanding re:the cosmos). Great targets as everyone no matter their level of interest or understanding will be impressed, inspired and touched by what they are seeing. Truly a new era for humanity and our relationship with the universe. The levels of awe are impossible to express.
That image of hundreds of galaxies is something. Seeing how small we are compare to the universe, think about it, every star you see in the sky is just in our own milky Way galaxy alone, so every galaxy you see in that image have the same or more stars than our own, not including planets. WOW something to really get you thinking. Amazing
What is really amazing is that pictures that we saw from Hubble telescope are pretty much the similar. The only real difference is they are much further away. Universe is much bigger than what we expected.
True amazement I love anything to do with space for many reasons but the main one is my dad he is my space hero he built the replacement battery for the Hubble space telescope and also a battery that is in one of the Smithsonian and a battery that’s for display at his work. He also was given a piece of the Hubble Space Telescope’s heat shield and it’s in our living room it is one of my most prized possessions because of its significance. 😄
I’m very interested in the James Webb images. I’ve already changed my phone screen savers to the Carina Nebula photo so I can study it all of the time. I’m excited to see the next batch of photos. Thank You for the video
Absolutely breathtaking, and a thrilling breakthrough. Human ingenuity at its best! However, and I'm glad nobody knows where I live, seeing space as it existed 13 billion years ago it's a bit of a downer - even some galaxies may not exist anymore. Additionally, the vast majority of humanity can't even fully comprehend the magnitude of this astonishing feat. And since not everybody has 500K lying around for a quick trip to space or will ever join a mission to Mars... Couldn't they use the JWST to show such detailed images of our Milky Way Galaxy, and of the planets from our own solar system? Imagine how that would look like...
The view of the latest space pictures is so awesome and amazing to look at. It's something that got my mind wondering what it would be like being physically at such a distance from the earth. I am also curious to find out what interpretations will be made about the latest discovered star structures by astrologers and cosmic geniuses. What a time to be alive.
They aren't geniuses. They just know a bit more than you because they have spent their whole lives considering the matter. Had they been geniuses they would probably already have guessed it in their head. Patently not so. Amazing and awesome mean the same.
Yup! @1:45 "A picture with 150 MILLION Pixels!" Thats the info I was looking for, So the only way to See the real picture in proper definition, would be to have a tv screen as big as the sky....so yeah, have to dub it down.
How light travels is mind-boggling. So if we were able to achieve interstellar travel, moving towards those distant galaxies and space bodies, you would see a rapid change in the visuals of said space objects(relative to earth terms)
I may have had to wait a good chunk of my life for this one but Nasa and the James Webb team knocked this one out of the park. Congratulations on doing the impossible, in such a spectacular way. You all will be remembered forever.
It's so complicated to explain space to friends who have no idea about what space is.....but also i enjoy telling them facts that i know about space😃😃😃
At 6:40 she says that we can look into the past and put together a story of how the universe has changed. But if we can only look at how the objects were at that time, how can we compare as we we don’t know their present status? Any ideas?
We just live in the present. The past is the present slipped by. The future is a mental construct. We understand very little about the past, most of which is not available to study in the first place. We hardly understand anything of the present and we are certainly practically completely idiotic about the future. If you wish to continue to think that man is great because of the JWT, then look at all the ignorance JWT will throw into our faces. Oh what is that and the other and that other one? Yeah, exactly.
I'm so humbled by these pictures, they are just astounding! To think every single one of those galaxies seen could potentially host life, for me it's very inspiring. I hope many people will begin to understand what we are part of. At my previous job I happened to share some facts about a planet in a coffeetable conversation. Coworker said playfully to another collague "he's so into these space things!" Well, why wouldn't I be? Everything we know are here, in space, by a narrow chance. This is our home. It's like talking about your neighborhood.
those images are spectacular i have been looking at them all day almost and they are truly stunning. seeing how far we can see how detailed those images are and seeing those gas cloads and distent galaxies seeing the red shift the warping of galaxies behind other galaxies. just simply wow. a cant wait to see what more this great telescope sees and what we find in those great images. what answers we will get and the new quiestions we will ask about our universe. truly spectacular
It is very likely that you will get far more questions than answers and any further knowledge is bound to be disconcerting. One day science will declare: Know what? God exists.
Nice, but the images could be sharper: I don't understand why, in this age of adaptive optics and multiple mirrors, the engineers still choose to obstruct the light path with a central secondary mirror (or sensor) mounted on legs. You can clearly see the deleterious diffraction effects of the secondary and its legs on the brighter star images: all those star spikes are produced by the light diffracting around the obstruction. An off-axis (meaning unobstructed) primary multi-mirror could certainly be designed and built with the necessary adaptive corrections that would make such an arrangement practical, eliminating most of the image-dulling diffraction.
The comparison images between JWST & HST is where you really see how spectacular JWST is and we know it’ll get even better going forward. Most looking forward to those early galaxies with maximum detail. Also, zooming in to Saturn & Jupiter and their interesting moons. A closer look at the Mars polar regions. Perhaps even finding the hidden Planet 9 of our solar system (not Pluto).
@EL JAY HUDF took something like 77 days of observations into that narrow patch of very dark sky. I’m sure it’s in the planning stages for JWST and it’ll only take a few days. Seeing those very early galaxies in detail, currently showing up as red smudges, would be amazing. I’d also like to see the center of our Milky Way and its Supermassive Black Hole in great clarity.
@EL JAY That fuzzy EHT image of Sagittarius A* was inspirational. I read that JWST will study the Sagittarius A* in detail during its first year in conjunction with EHT. The objective is to observe the jets of gas emanating from the black hole at light speed. The byproduct could well be a higher resolution image of Sagittarius A*.
@@TheAllocatedReviewer It's also called gravitational lensing, and it's like an eclipse when the moon blocks sunlight. There's a massive galaxy cluster and dark matter between earth and the distorted light.
So...we're looking back through time? Space? Both? Do those stars and galaxies exist any more? As pictured? Further away, receding, never to be seen again? *mind blown*
I thoroughly enjoyed your video. Seeing the images without basic understanding is just like looking at arts. There is so much to be investigated and discovered. Thank you. Best wishes from Melbourne.
The picture showing the telescope in a fixe position aligned with the shadow of the earth is misleading. It is actually in a very large orbit around this point, the Lagrange 2' point. That way it can be solar powered and it increases its stability.
It would be great if we could restructure the universe, draw a 3D model, and put it in a simulator. We should make one for the web, desktop flat-screen app, and VR! If AR or augmented reality becomes widely available, this be an awesome tool to use for education purposes!
You literally read my mind about a thought I had earlier in the day. I was thinking about: say instead of a 3d model. What if they could digitally create a deep layered image. Like how they get cell shading in the classic animated movies where they have 4 or 3 panels of windows stacked above each other and at least give it this actual depth and texture type effect with foreground and backdrops. Maybe they have tech now that could mesh that with a program and make it so you could plan inwards and backwards into the field of the image... Just even something like That would be so cool.
At this point in our development of technology the universe is far too vast to put into a 3D model. Up to now millions of galaxies have been mapped, but that is still a tiny fraction of how .any are out there which something like hundred to two hundred billion!!
@@benmcreynolds8581 I think of Iron Man 2 and Iron Man 3 scenes where he is using his hologram technologies just without the augmented reality glasses.
The sundial shatters the globe. if the earth rotates from west to east around a fixed point of light that is the sun, it could only mark those hours. Take an apple and stick a toothpick in its center and turn it in front of a flashlight, the shadow it will leave will be that. it should only mark 3 and 9 o'clock. The sundial works because the sun rotates in the sky above us and a flat earth like the hand of a clock. Sorry. they have lied to us. NASA means DECEIVE in Hebrew
@@hmgrraarrpffrzz9763 Sorry, that is true, even Mr. President noted this collaboration, before he began to prise the american ingenuity and the american possibilities....
First envisioned in 1996, JWST was originally expected to cost between $1 billion and $3.5 billion, with a launch date scheduled for sometime between 2007 and 2011. But the cost of the project grew throughout the early 2000s, soaring above $4.5 billion, as the telescope’s launch was consistently postponed. Then in 2011, the JWST program went through an extensive replan: a new launch date was set for 2018, and Congress capped the cost of the telescope’s development at $8 billion. After that, NASA said JWST would ultimately cost $8.8 billion, with an extra $837 million needed to operate the telescope once it was in space. In September, NASA pushed the date of JWST’s launch to spring 2019, because of the time needed to put the pieces of the spacecraft together. But it claimed the existing budget for the program would accommodate the delay. Now, NASA says it will soon provide an estimate on how much this latest delay will exceed the $8 billion cap. And that means that Congress will need to reauthorize the program in order for it to move forward. It’s unclear how NASA will fit in the increased costs, as it is expecting flat budgets in the years ahead.
It is mind blowing ancient images ever captured in histody of space. Cluster of hundred of galaxies of early universe. We are in age of new astronomy. It opened new window to our universe. It is just beginnin. Thanks JWST and thanks for NASA, ESA and CSA.
@@tjellis1479 that's kind of what i was thinking, have seen official NASA video where they admit to stringing together "ribbons of information" to produce "composite" images, which is essentially Photoshop
Are there any plans to point the camera at stars within our galaxy? If they can see that far away and so clearly, can they not see light reflecting of planets from within the milky way?
This is a pretty good initial presentation with an adequate overview of the JWST itself. e.g. position in space, instruments particularly. But the narrator was wrong when she said that the deep field was farthest back we have seen was looking back 4.5 billion years. The ultra deep field by Hubble looked back something 13.1 billion years ago. This Deep Field image by the JWST was looking as far back as just a few hundred million years after the Big Bang so something like 13.4 billion years ago for the most remote objects. I would welcome clarification on this.
@@michaelhill6451 What is your source for that information? More to the point the JWST only just started viewing distant objects so how far away it can actually resolve an image remains to be determined.
@@michaelhill6451 That's a very long winded explanation which does indeed verify your earlier statement. And I heard similar information on a Q and A from astronomers talking about the JW images. I'm glad to be corrected. However I disagree with you that the JWST images don't show significantly better resolution then Hubble. Compare the Eta Carinae or South Ring Nebula images. The JWST are much sharper. And astrophysicists commenting on the images are saying that as well!
10:28 I'm absolutely excited about the MASS UNVEILING of spacetime from James Webb; so...correct me if I'm wrong, but what I'm mostly getting from this exposition is that *most of spacetime is LOADED with gas-streams of hydrogen and oxygen,* which technically implies to me that *we are living under seemingly infinite cloud-streams of PURE WATER!* I'm excited about this because if that's what most of spacetime is made of, *that's most of the data worth GREAT consideration,* because since most of planet Earth is filled with water, as well as its currently inhabiting organisms (including us), we should not take this crucial piece of information for granted! I've always been told that at least 8 cups of water a day can keep us alive for a night's sleep, and *that has never held any truer to me than this day!!* I'm actually excited to see more gas clouds running through different stars, because I feel SO glad knowing just EXACTLY how much life there could POSSIBLY be up there...!
Life is out there. Very advanced life, far more advanced than us. This life had millions and billions of years head start. Our planet is only 4.5 billion years old, so life started billions of years before our own planet was born. It’s hard for humans to grasp how long ago 13 billion years is.
I was on lunch at work and I had tears on my face. The same thing happened when I saw the "old" Hubbell UDF... ... looking out that far.... is overwhelming. It is impossible to really explain it to people...who don't get it. It's hard to handle that part.... I can't have much of a conversation about it with most of my close people...they just say "oh wow cool"... but... thankfully my coworker is on the same page. Humbled and amazed.... it's not like pointing a telescope at something and seeing way more.... it's pointing a telescope at nothing, and seeing the beginning of everything
I know exactly what you mean! Like this just humbeled me and made me happy. It took my existential anxieties away. We’re nothing and everything at the same time. I hate that most ppl are not into this stuff. Society has done a great job of blocking peoples 3rd eye.
I'm glad I'm not alone
It’s crazy how these images are taken of things unimaginabley far away, and yet, there are still universes as small as grains of sand that are even further than that
what are we?
Other galaxies perhaps, not universes. As at this time of writing and as far as I know, we only know about this universe. Any other universe is probably not even theorised yet, just speculated on.
@@emanuelgaldes3515 True a working hypothesis only. The math works but I can't see how you can get any real evidence for it to be a theory. But, the same could be said about finding in our Galaxy and Universe. The math suggests there is but it is all a hypothesis at the moment.
Too much marvel movies 🙃
It’s fake
Human ingenuity is impressive.
If only we weren’t so messed up…
Amazing insights into the past and this Universe. 👏🏼
Hopefully no zealots find a way to bomb the telescope
One comes with the other it seems.
True, but maybe something for the country and world to rally around will help.
Galileo was put in prison by the church for less
humans are exceptionally good at making tools, the JWST is just caveman wheel on steroids unfortunately we can't shake our reptilian brain inclinations.
That’s so cool. It’s good that in our species there are dedicated people like these pushing the boundaries of our understanding of reality
You have no clue about our reality
This is CGI
@@joedirt6073 🤓🤓🤓
@@creamberriesxd2298
Most are like you
@@joedirt6073 neither do you then. Enjoy the cgi!
@@APAstronaut333
You are correct...we have all been lied to...and why wouldn't the controllers lie to us?
It's amazing how that kind of "ultra deep field" picture has so many distorted galaxies/stars. The view is so deep that it goes trough so many dense gravitional distortions. And it just seems like a normal picture... now imagine what else is to come
That’s space time lol. Absolutely insane. It’s very weird to think about how it just bends
Let me guess, uh.. the jetsons
I’m not sure this is a typical view. I think they looked at his area because of the insane gravitational lensing going on that reveals galaxies further away that the JWST would normally be able to resolve - 13 billion light years away. Which is totally awesome. What you’re seeing here is in a sense a telescope looking down a telescope! Wrap your head around that one. : )
It's cool to be able to see the curvature of spacetime so clearly. And the nebulae are beautiful :)
I think they just happened to discover that lensing effect after the first hubble 2 week exposure photo. I think I heard they just picked a area of the sky that was completely block and void of stars to our initial vision. Then they just wanted to see what happens when they point it at a dark black void spot that seems empty... Well "the more you know" now we realize there is a ton of galaxies and activity in a area we that was not that full of much at first. (I could be wrong, I'll accept if I'm was incorrect about this. So feel free to mention anything because maybe I'm getting something confused and mixed up lol)
I wasn't overly taken back by the "deep field" view until you said it was an area the size of a grain of sand. Thank you - that put things into perspective for me. Great video!
@EL JAY Also Hubble needs 1-2 weeks of exposure for these images. JWST can do it in half a day.
Can this sensor make its way into our phone camera sensor?
@@GenSecWPNM That would be like looking directly into the sun with night vision goggles.
A sensor like this would be completely useless and impractical on Earth as it is much too sensitive. That is why we had to send JWST 1.5 mio. km away, so it can block out the Earth's radiation. Also it needs to be cooled to close to absolute zero to be able to detect those incredibly faint signals. If you used it on Earth you would only see a white image and the sensor would be quickly damaged and destroyed.
Mind. Blown.
@@michaelhill6451 Yea you're right, I shouldn't have said "exposure". I got that mixed up. But anyway the comparison of 100 hours in 10 days vs 12 hours in 12 hours still stands.
I’m looking forward to 25 years of spectacular science being delivered by WEBB! It’s been so long coming!
We won't last that long. The nuclear war is coming and everyone will die in a mutually assured destruction.
First You are going thru a polars magnetic shift, followed by Earth axis change,. Then if You are around You Will see a different sky, bye
@@teresitamarino6693 😂and I thought I was a tin hatter lol!!!
It's CGI you dope
@@joedirt6073 🤣your an idiot lol I’m sure Joe Dirt is a flat earther too😂 smfh! Funny af that people like this still exists!!!
I got really into amateur astronomy around the time they'd started placing the mirrors on JWST... you could watch the assembly on 24h webcams... I just couldn't get enough of the bizarre and mind blowing facts about our universe... And being in a pitch black field with a telescope finding galaxies on my own, contemplating the length of time those photons had been travelling before landing on my mirror and reflecting into my eye inspired such awe, the feeling and experience was almost spiritual. I remember around then it feeling like a LONG long time until Webb would be doing science (thinking about it, this was 10 - 12 years ago)... the first images are spectacular - the choice to redo the deep field is amazing and a a great homage to hubble (that original experiment/exercise and it's result was always my go to anecdote about the universe to express to others what was so magical, exciting and compelling about the pursuit of knowledge and understanding re:the cosmos). Great targets as everyone no matter their level of interest or understanding will be impressed, inspired and touched by what they are seeing. Truly a new era for humanity and our relationship with the universe. The levels of awe are impossible to express.
To God be the glory, the honour and the praise. He who created all this!
@@mugume did he tho? 🤔
@@justinmcgrath6763 looking increasingly likely. 😂😅😑
That image of hundreds of galaxies is something. Seeing how small we are compare to the universe, think about it, every star you see in the sky is just in our own milky Way galaxy alone, so every galaxy you see in that image have the same or more stars than our own, not including planets. WOW something to really get you thinking. Amazing
What is really amazing is that pictures that we saw from Hubble telescope are pretty much the similar. The only real difference is they are much further away. Universe is much bigger than what we expected.
Imagine the power of the next-generation telescope that will replace James Webb ..... Let's start the count down ( 20 years )
True amazement I love anything to do with space for many reasons but the main one is my dad he is my space hero he built the replacement battery for the Hubble space telescope and also a battery that is in one of the Smithsonian and a battery that’s for display at his work. He also was given a piece of the Hubble Space Telescope’s heat shield and it’s in our living room it is one of my most prized possessions because of its significance. 😄
For the world, it's significance is incalculable. For you and your families, I can't even imagine.
Who is your father?
@@ahmedtheegyptian8297 One amazing man I can imagine
Cool
Can we get a picture of that?
I’m very interested in the James Webb images. I’ve already changed my phone screen savers to the Carina Nebula photo so I can study it all of the time. I’m excited to see the next batch of photos. Thank You for the video
Same 😂
We're so blessed to witness these images.
Just imagine in 100 years from now
I love the fact that those images are captured looked like 80s rock album covers
Absolutely breathtaking, and a thrilling breakthrough. Human ingenuity at its best!
However, and I'm glad nobody knows where I live, seeing space as it existed 13 billion years ago it's a bit of a downer - even some galaxies may not exist anymore. Additionally, the vast majority of humanity can't even fully comprehend the magnitude of this astonishing feat. And since not everybody has 500K lying around for a quick trip to space or will ever join a mission to Mars...
Couldn't they use the JWST to show such detailed images of our Milky Way Galaxy, and of the planets from our own solar system?
Imagine how that would look like...
I agree I'd like to see more milky way stuff lol
As Homer Simpson would say" BOOOORRRRING
Apparently they are going to be exploring planets and solar systems closer to us :)
@@1015SaturdayNight Aww, how precious, just another waste of taxpayers money
The view of the latest space pictures is so awesome and amazing to look at. It's something that got my mind wondering what it would be like being physically at such a distance from the earth. I am also curious to find out what interpretations will be made about the latest discovered star structures by astrologers and cosmic geniuses.
What a time to be alive.
Astrologers?
They aren't geniuses. They just know a bit more than you because they have spent their whole lives considering the matter. Had they been geniuses they would probably already have guessed it in their head. Patently not so. Amazing and awesome mean the same.
Astrologers will just make it up. Duh!
*astronomers”
It would be helpful to see a side-by-side comparison of the Webb images next to the same Hubble image or ground based telescope image.
Nasa has them side by side for the deep field image on their website.
Go to Fraser Cain, JSWT First colour images explained. He does this. Much better video.
Great overview! Just what I was looking for. Very well done. Thank you.
Yup!
@1:45 "A picture with 150 MILLION Pixels!"
Thats the info I was looking for,
So the only way to See the real picture in proper definition, would be to have a tv screen as big as the sky....so yeah, have to dub it down.
What was my first reaction looking at these pictures???
I had tears in my eyes.
How light travels is mind-boggling. So if we were able to achieve interstellar travel, moving towards those distant galaxies and space bodies, you would see a rapid change in the visuals of said space objects(relative to earth terms)
This is unbelievable! I'm almost so positive we will find other habitable planets. So so EXCITING!!!!
So excited about all the cool things we will see and learn.
Amazing. I'm so exited about what's coming next. Cmon James Webb, surprise the cosmos lovers.
not much.we need way more poverfull telescope
You guys should cover more of these.
I admire James Webb and love RUclips more than ever.
I watched a few days ago live looking at the raw images and was so amazed. Now I am doing my best to process and stretch my crazy mind even further!
great presentation!
I may have had to wait a good chunk of my life for this one but Nasa and the James Webb team knocked this one out of the park. Congratulations on doing the impossible, in such a spectacular way. You all will be remembered forever.
Space is fascinating
Thanks for sharing knowledge
Wonderful presentation of the James Webb as truly a game-changer in astronomy and cosmology
It's so complicated to explain space to friends who have no idea about what space is.....but also i enjoy telling them facts that i know about space😃😃😃
This is truly the best way to appreciate the universe
At 6:40 she says that we can look into the past and put together a story of how the universe has changed. But if we can only look at how the objects were at that time, how can we compare as we we don’t know their present status? Any ideas?
That's where science kicks in
One thing to consider: we are ALWAYS watching the past, even if the theme is the mobile devise you are holding right now.
We just live in the present. The past is the present slipped by. The future is a mental construct. We understand very little about the past, most of which is not available to study in the first place. We hardly understand anything of the present and we are certainly practically completely idiotic about the future. If you wish to continue to think that man is great because of the JWT, then look at all the ignorance JWT will throw into our faces. Oh what is that and the other and that other one? Yeah, exactly.
@@emanuelgaldes3515 nihalist?
@@emanuelgaldes3515 what? i dont understand what you're trying to say? what do you mean???????
I'm so humbled by these pictures, they are just astounding! To think every single one of those galaxies seen could potentially host life, for me it's very inspiring. I hope many people will begin to understand what we are part of.
At my previous job I happened to share some facts about a planet in a coffeetable conversation. Coworker said playfully to another collague "he's so into these space things!" Well, why wouldn't I be? Everything we know are here, in space, by a narrow chance. This is our home. It's like talking about your neighborhood.
It is great seeing mankind expanding awareness and knowledge of the universe.
Those images are humbling to say the least
Awesome Camera design. Great Work.
Imagine someone is watching our present from a far distance as the past.........
The best and clearest overview of this awesome time machine
those images are spectacular i have been looking at them all day almost and they are truly stunning. seeing how far we can see how detailed those images are and seeing those gas cloads and distent galaxies seeing the red shift the warping of galaxies behind other galaxies. just simply wow. a cant wait to see what more this great telescope sees and what we find in those great images. what answers we will get and the new quiestions we will ask about our universe. truly spectacular
It is very likely that you will get far more questions than answers and any further knowledge is bound to be disconcerting. One day science will declare: Know what? God exists.
I am really grateful about being able to witness these images from current technology.
Thanks for explaining !!!
Love From India 🇮🇳
Nice, but the images could be sharper: I don't understand why, in this age of adaptive optics and multiple mirrors, the engineers still choose to obstruct the light path with a central secondary mirror (or sensor) mounted on legs. You can clearly see the deleterious diffraction effects of the secondary and its legs on the brighter star images: all those star spikes are produced by the light diffracting around the obstruction. An off-axis (meaning unobstructed) primary multi-mirror could certainly be designed and built with the necessary adaptive corrections that would make such an arrangement practical, eliminating most of the image-dulling diffraction.
We are born anew... waiting to grow up. It's unbelievable what we are seeing from the very first images of the James Webb telescope.
The pic that this telescope taken is past or future pictures? I'm just confuse...bcs they keep on telling the pictures is from past
The comparison images between JWST & HST is where you really see how spectacular JWST is and we know it’ll get even better going forward. Most looking forward to those early galaxies with maximum detail. Also, zooming in to Saturn & Jupiter and their interesting moons. A closer look at the Mars polar regions. Perhaps even finding the hidden Planet 9 of our solar system (not Pluto).
@EL JAY HUDF took something like 77 days of observations into that narrow patch of very dark sky. I’m sure it’s in the planning stages for JWST and it’ll only take a few days. Seeing those very early galaxies in detail, currently showing up as red smudges, would be amazing.
I’d also like to see the center of our Milky Way and its Supermassive Black Hole in great clarity.
@EL JAY That fuzzy EHT image of Sagittarius A* was inspirational. I read that JWST will study the Sagittarius A* in detail during its first year in conjunction with EHT. The objective is to observe the jets of gas emanating from the black hole at light speed. The byproduct could well be a higher resolution image of Sagittarius A*.
The distortion of light from the distant galaxies pictures gives me a tubular perception of the image as a whole. Is there an explanation for this?
Are you talking about the Einstein Rings that distorts the galaxies?
@@ritemolawbks8012 umm maybe? I never heard of that.
@@TheAllocatedReviewer It's also called gravitational lensing, and it's like an eclipse when the moon blocks sunlight.
There's a massive galaxy cluster and dark matter between earth and the distorted light.
Very good documentary! Great video!
So...we're looking back through time? Space? Both? Do those stars and galaxies exist any more? As pictured? Further away, receding, never to be seen again? *mind blown*
I thoroughly enjoyed your video. Seeing the images without basic understanding is just like looking at arts. There is so much to be investigated and discovered. Thank you. Best wishes from Melbourne.
It 's very informative. Thank you
Amazing pictures and data that make us wonder about the power that created such a universe, which we are still trying to understand it’s origin
Jehova is the Creator.
ALLAH
Big bang. Evolution in all it's glory.
@@FalconX79 ALLAH MAKES EVERYTHING THIS IS BELIEVE OF EVERY MUSLIM
THATS RIGHT
This Is amazing, I am looking forward to all the amazing pictures.
The picture showing the telescope in a fixe position aligned with the shadow of the earth is misleading. It is actually in a very large orbit around this point, the Lagrange 2' point. That way it can be solar powered and it increases its stability.
amazing beyond words
The photo of the nebula seems artistic. So far, that one was worth the trip.
Im just wondering,
How do the thing send us the picture from that far away ?
The 1st picture is not the furthest weve ever seen in the Universe. Its the deepest INFRARED photo weve ever taken of the Universe.
The universe doesn’t exist
Astonishing and Breathtaking...
This is making my heart race 💓
Absolutely fascinating 💓💓💓💓💓💓💓💓💓🌷
i would like to know about the early studies commissioned, their purpose, and expected completion time and finings,
It would be great if we could restructure the universe, draw a 3D model, and put it in a simulator. We should make one for the web, desktop flat-screen app, and VR! If AR or augmented reality becomes widely available, this be an awesome tool to use for education purposes!
You literally read my mind about a thought I had earlier in the day. I was thinking about: say instead of a 3d model. What if they could digitally create a deep layered image. Like how they get cell shading in the classic animated movies where they have 4 or 3 panels of windows stacked above each other and at least give it this actual depth and texture type effect with foreground and backdrops. Maybe they have tech now that could mesh that with a program and make it so you could plan inwards and backwards into the field of the image... Just even something like That would be so cool.
At this point in our development of technology the universe is far too vast to put into a 3D model. Up to now millions of galaxies have been mapped, but that is still a tiny fraction of how .any are out there which something like hundred to two hundred billion!!
@@benmcreynolds8581 I think of Iron Man 2 and Iron Man 3 scenes where he is using his hologram technologies just without the augmented reality glasses.
@@supercoolmunkee That kind of stuff is only decades away,i believe Neuralink will make that possible.
The sundial shatters the globe. if the earth rotates from west to east around a fixed point of light that is the sun, it could only mark those hours. Take an apple and stick a toothpick in its center and turn it in front of a flashlight, the shadow it will leave will be that. it should only mark 3 and 9 o'clock. The sundial works because the sun rotates in the sky above us and a flat earth like the hand of a clock. Sorry. they have lied to us. NASA means DECEIVE in Hebrew
It is outstanding. Thanks for putting thinks into perspective for me , we are part of a grain of sand.
I love it! I nerd out on this stuff and I love this video!
Cool vid. Thanks for sharing.
Thank you
Amazing! Simply amazing!
Owesome findings! Well done!
8:17 - What did he say again??? 😂🤔🙈
I just woke up, and my mind is being blown again
Been waiting a long time for what this engineering marvel will do
NASA really has sharpened the eyes of mankind!
In collaboration with European Space Agency (ESA) and the Canadian Space Agency (CSA). :)
@@hmgrraarrpffrzz9763 Sorry, that is true, even Mr. President noted this collaboration, before he began to prise the american ingenuity and the american possibilities....
First envisioned in 1996, JWST was originally expected to cost between $1 billion and $3.5 billion, with a launch date scheduled for sometime between 2007 and 2011. But the cost of the project grew throughout the early 2000s, soaring above $4.5 billion, as the telescope’s launch was consistently postponed. Then in 2011, the JWST program went through an extensive replan: a new launch date was set for 2018, and Congress capped the cost of the telescope’s development at $8 billion. After that, NASA said JWST would ultimately cost $8.8 billion, with an extra $837 million needed to operate the telescope once it was in space.
In September, NASA pushed the date of JWST’s launch to spring 2019, because of the time needed to put the pieces of the spacecraft together. But it claimed the existing budget for the program would accommodate the delay. Now, NASA says it will soon provide an estimate on how much this latest delay will exceed the $8 billion cap. And that means that Congress will need to reauthorize the program in order for it to move forward. It’s unclear how NASA will fit in the increased costs, as it is expecting flat budgets in the years ahead.
It is mind blowing ancient images ever captured in histody of space. Cluster of hundred of galaxies of early universe.
We are in age of new astronomy. It opened new window to our universe. It is just beginnin.
Thanks JWST and thanks for NASA, ESA and CSA.
Never imagined JWT will take colored images. Mind blown.
Very impressive thankyou
Are these pictures photographs, or constructed / composite images?
it's all CGI...no photographs taken ....all digital media. data streams of I/Os
@@tjellis1479 that's kind of what i was thinking, have seen official NASA video where they admit to stringing together "ribbons of information" to produce "composite" images, which is essentially Photoshop
Saw some gravitational lensing, cool!!!
Imagine the telescope runs into another telescope from another galaxy on the same mission 🤯
I’m amazed by the photos
I would most like for the JWST to investigate the planets orbiting the Alpha Centauri stars for signs of life.
Wow !!! I hope to see and know more!
Will JWS Zoom in on alpha and proxma centuary ? At a realtive close distance from Earth the images should be revealing.
Incredible images..
Thank you. It made more sense now 🙏⭐️
Are there any plans to point the camera at stars within our galaxy? If they can see that far away and so clearly, can they not see light reflecting of planets from within the milky way?
0:25 shouldn't your title be *Principal Video Producer* ?
Yep that scope putting work
Beautiful Space scenery
We should all love each other, we are nothing.
Slight error at 3:26, she says we're looking 13.5 Billion years back, it's actually 5 Billion only. 13.5 B years is the age of the universe.
Pretty amazing
Thank you Claire! Nicely done. This is the best example of how/where/why of the James Webb works. :)
This is a pretty good initial presentation with an adequate overview of the JWST itself. e.g. position in space, instruments particularly.
But the narrator was wrong when she said that the deep field was farthest back we have seen was looking back 4.5 billion years. The ultra deep field by Hubble looked back something 13.1 billion years ago. This Deep Field image by the JWST was looking as far back as just a few hundred million years after the Big Bang so something like 13.4 billion years ago for the most remote objects.
I would welcome clarification on this.
@@michaelhill6451 What is your source for that information? More to the point the JWST only just started viewing distant objects so how far away it can actually resolve an image remains to be determined.
@@michaelhill6451 That's a very long winded explanation which does indeed verify your earlier statement. And I heard similar information on a Q and A from astronomers talking about the JW images. I'm glad to be corrected.
However I disagree with you that the JWST images don't show significantly better resolution then Hubble. Compare the Eta Carinae or South Ring Nebula images. The JWST are much sharper. And astrophysicists commenting on the images are saying that as well!
10:28
I'm absolutely excited about the MASS UNVEILING of spacetime from James Webb; so...correct me if I'm wrong, but what I'm mostly getting from this exposition is that *most of spacetime is LOADED with gas-streams of hydrogen and oxygen,* which technically implies to me that *we are living under seemingly infinite cloud-streams of PURE WATER!* I'm excited about this because if that's what most of spacetime is made of, *that's most of the data worth GREAT consideration,* because since most of planet Earth is filled with water, as well as its currently inhabiting organisms (including us), we should not take this crucial piece of information for granted! I've always been told that at least 8 cups of water a day can keep us alive for a night's sleep, and *that has never held any truer to me than this day!!* I'm actually excited to see more gas clouds running through different stars, because I feel SO glad knowing just EXACTLY how much life there could POSSIBLY be up there...!
Amazing 🤩
its more likely gas of Hydrogen and Helium, not Oxygen, since that is a fusion product of stars
I remember a day in High School there was a Tech from NASA talking about a Space Telescope they were starting to work on called Hubble.
Life is out there. Very advanced life, far more advanced than us. This life had millions and billions of years head start. Our planet is only 4.5 billion years old, so life started billions of years before our own planet was born. It’s hard for humans to grasp how long ago 13 billion years is.