NASA Just Opened The Largest Asteroid Sample But Saw Unexpected Things Inside

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  • Опубликовано: 12 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 1,6 тыс.

  • @beezneez2056
    @beezneez2056 Год назад +521

    Thank goodness there are people brilliant enough to figure out how to do these things. It’s fascinating! The amount of calculations required to complete this mission is mind boggling. Bravo! To everyone who was a part of this…. wow… job well done!

    • @Eternal_Hoop
      @Eternal_Hoop Год назад

      Your just gullible af. Earth is flat. Research the world record picture in distance. Its 270+ miles with 9 miles of curve missing.
      Look for yourself. I seen clouds behind the sun while hunting on a mountain top last year. Globers are sleepy

    • @AZ-ql6nz
      @AZ-ql6nz Год назад +16

      It's not that hard. I do that all the time

    • @niks660097
      @niks660097 Год назад +5

      @@AZ-ql6nz surely..

    • @squidrb
      @squidrb Год назад

      @@niks660097nah he does

    • @narbaodecuas7003
      @narbaodecuas7003 Год назад +4

      It is that hard unfortunately, on a student rocketry team

  • @conTAMInated71
    @conTAMInated71 Год назад +1491

    Why didn't they implant a camera on the asteroid that could send information back to Earth? That would be FASCINATING!!

    • @trevormagee-xm5bz
      @trevormagee-xm5bz Год назад +265

      I'd assume the fact there wasn't any room for error just getting the sample. Adding another mission to throw down a camera would have caused problems. That and the cost of the added weight going a billion miles away wouldn't be worth whatever imaged it would return. NASA does space, I doubt that video would be interesting to them at all they see this crap daily.
      Also with the way the asteroid tumbles and rolls through space there wouldn't be a line of sight back to earth that lasts long enough to send any data that would compose much of any picture or video feed worth a damn.

    • @conTAMInated71
      @conTAMInated71 Год назад +46

      @@trevormagee-xm5bz but wouldn't it be cool if it did....

    • @kaponkotrok
      @kaponkotrok Год назад +30

      ​@@conTAMInated71as cool as putting a UN flag on it.

    • @conTAMInated71
      @conTAMInated71 Год назад +143

      @@kaponkotrok I'm not gonna get political on RUclips, but I don't care whose flag goes on it. I just want to see what's at the edges of the universe. Information like that should be for all mankind. Forget flags.

    • @timespot8804
      @timespot8804 Год назад +11

      See it's tough to implant something on moon and though on this asteroid it's near zero gravity. The universe is much more interesting

  • @excellinkus
    @excellinkus Год назад +410

    This is the best coverage of the OSIRIS-REx mission I've ever seen. It even included the Japanese Hayabusa mission, which recovered amino acids - the building blocks of life - from asteroid Ryugu, when the capsule returned to earth in 2010. It will be interesting to see what they recover from the Bennu mission - will they find hydrocarbons and amino acids? I'm also looking forward to follow OSIRIS-REx's encounter with Apophis in 2029.

    • @Spacestorm50
      @Spacestorm50 Год назад +14

      Every asteroid or comets should have a tracking device on it and ping back the distance it's is periodically then we would have a great layout and map with the data and everything could be tracked and have threatening space objects to ping back an alert if within a danger zone to humanity would make everything easier it would be a tiny rocket drone with a spider bot form that would have a tiny drill in the under belly of it like can be used as an anchor point and or could have an embedded sensor within said anchor point and ping back the composition data and sense it would have a spider body it's legs would be more mailable with more joint points and could flex 360 degrees and reverse and inside out incase on falling over and it becoming incapacitated. Tiny solar panel could be used. These could be a possible "Swarm" Capabible to cover more areas but only have 1 "host Bot" that would only be capable of transitioning it's data, the other bot that would come out of the "host bot" would be sharinf the ride within the capsule and would be actived to be able to move around based on directions given from us in earth to the "host bot" antenna receiver.

    • @Born2Fight4PAIN
      @Born2Fight4PAIN Год назад +1

      They did just reveal the findings. Calling it a "astrobiologist’s dream.”

    • @mynameisnobody5838
      @mynameisnobody5838 Год назад +2

      Yeah great coverage lol it’s all computer generated people will believe anything theses days

    • @pascha4527
      @pascha4527 Год назад +1

      ​@@mynameisnobody5838The part where nasa open the capsule is also CGI?

    • @bliss_gore5194
      @bliss_gore5194 Год назад +2

      ​@@mynameisnobody5838srsly lmao gullible has never been so funny as a word

  • @jokermtb
    @jokermtb Год назад +352

    That they were able to hit earth's orbit at just the right time and angle so it landed in UTAH (could have landed anywhere), is incredible.....the math don't lie! they nailed it.

    • @joelface
      @joelface Год назад +35

      They knew so specifically where it would land that they had scientists AT the landing site within a few minutes.

    • @salsylexhagen7423
      @salsylexhagen7423 Год назад +30

      Math is amazing. I just wish I could make my brain understand it 😂

    • @jokermtb
      @jokermtb Год назад +6

      so cool how they can math it so precisely @@joelface

    • @itzturtlexd1721
      @itzturtlexd1721 Год назад +16

      Imagine how cool it would’ve been to be the crew that went to retrieve the capsule. Knowing the crazy journey this box just went through. How it was literally just outside earths atmosphere lol

    • @Ben-kh2rh
      @Ben-kh2rh Год назад +16

      Flat earthers where are you?

  • @zetectic7968
    @zetectic7968 Год назад +553

    Amazing that they could program the space probe to travel so far & meet up with the asteroid & then get it to return to Earth.

    • @paulstewart6293
      @paulstewart6293 Год назад +80

      And most people think that math is boring and useless.

    • @otpyrcralphpierre1742
      @otpyrcralphpierre1742 Год назад +48

      @@paulstewart6293 And somehow "Racist". smh

    • @Atheist7
      @Atheist7 Год назад +28

      And yet, can't land people on the moon yet.

    • @paulstewart6293
      @paulstewart6293 Год назад +46

      ​@@Atheist7Some people can't write a coherent sentence. Maybe we should improve education in general.

    • @Atheist7
      @Atheist7 Год назад +6

      @@paulstewart6293 Uh-oh.
      Did I "step in it"?

  • @irene_renaissance
    @irene_renaissance Год назад +52

    Honestly speaking,was eagerly waiting for an episode on Osiris-Rex! As usual it comes out as another excellent episode! ✨❤️👏

  • @angeloflores2614
    @angeloflores2614 Год назад +18

    man huge respect for all of those scientist they will never see that year when asteroid will hit but still studying how to avoid the damage for the future generation

  • @user-Fallout1066
    @user-Fallout1066 Год назад +25

    So I basically watched a video where I didn’t get to see the sample . Excellent 👌

  • @JeffreyBue_imtxsmoke
    @JeffreyBue_imtxsmoke Год назад +217

    I'm sure NASA has considered all possibilities for contaminating the asteroid sample, but I'm wondering what the effect is upon exposure to the Earth's atmosphere. I realize they are in a clean room when opening the spacecraft, but the air in the clean room has oxygen and water and I would think that would contaminate it.

    • @donaldkasper8346
      @donaldkasper8346 Год назад +11

      Since when does air and moisture contaminate minerals once they are collected? The only mineral I know of that changes with exposure to air is marcasite and opal.

    • @jaroldscottwilliams.3rd832
      @jaroldscottwilliams.3rd832 Год назад +76

      @@donaldkasper8346 Water reactive chemicals are chemicals that react vigorously with moisture. The most common water sensitive chemicals include sodium, potassium, lithium metals and aluminum alkyls.
      Air-sensitive compounds are substances that would react, explode or oxidize with air, such as organometallic compounds (chemical compounds containing at least one chemical bond between a metal and carbon atom, including alkaline earth, alkaline and transition metals).
      Then you have to consider the potential for new substances including things that don't follow the rules like oobleck.
      Oxygen is surprisingly... corrosive...? I don't know the right word for it. It breaks things down.

    • @TheKingTiger96
      @TheKingTiger96 Год назад +41

      They probably opened in a glovebox, which is usually filled with nitrogen and it has minimal levels of oxygen and moisture

    • @donaldkasper8346
      @donaldkasper8346 Год назад +4

      @@TheKingTiger96 The only effect of air is drying for organic compounds and opals. Air is not going to instantly interact with a mineral and change its composition.

    • @IanMacKaye-eg8hd
      @IanMacKaye-eg8hd Год назад +17

      @donaldkasper8346 You seem to be under the impression that only minerals are contained in that sample. It almost certainly has various organic molecules that could react in a few different ways with oxygen to alter the composition of the molecules contained within. The Japanese mission had amino acids in their sample for example. It’d be fascinating if they find any trace of hydrocarbons in this sample.

  • @TLZ
    @TLZ Год назад +87

    They've released the Venom symbiote onto the world.

  • @nevertolatetoprepare2802
    @nevertolatetoprepare2802 Год назад +15

    That dust and debris may actually turn out to be more valuable than the actual sample as it contains the latest deposits on the asteroid.

  • @shadowrodney
    @shadowrodney Год назад +126

    Makes you think.. if a random asteroid has the building blocks for life.. if this is true for most asteroids and all planets were made from such asteroids... then doesn't that mean life under the right circumstances is inevitable?

    • @reinertgregal1130
      @reinertgregal1130 Год назад +11

      Maybe the fact that they form so easily makes it building blocks for life

    • @donald4095
      @donald4095 Год назад +6

      It means if we get the right dust we can bring the dinosaurs back again

    • @LilB0pete
      @LilB0pete Год назад +8

      There is a theory that these building blocks were present for a few million years during the early universe where the universe was more or less entirely in the habitable zone, even in empty space.

    • @GauravKumar-fg7jh
      @GauravKumar-fg7jh Год назад +1

      @@LilB0pete thats the kurzgesagt video

    • @LilB0pete
      @LilB0pete Год назад +1

      @@GauravKumar-fg7jh they were not the first to propose the idea

  • @thepresentmoment369
    @thepresentmoment369 Год назад +58

    This is so awesome!!! I wish I could be a part of a space voyager team some day.

    • @seasonedbeefs
      @seasonedbeefs Год назад

      Nuts. You've got to be nuts to sit on the top of a rocket. Good luck with your dreams but it is a serious NO from me.

    • @libradragon
      @libradragon Год назад +12

      The Voyager 'Twins' are an amazing glimpse into both past and future. You can become what you want, what you dream to become. Be at peace and know. You will find your mentor, no matter the timing, the placement, the life. Might be in your life now if you are young, or if an older dreamer, like me, you will build the foundation of such wistful promises.
      My Dad knew my passions, so he gave me a dream on a Christmas Morning; a full model of Cape Canaveral, with all the Saturn V Rocketry, gantry, the scenery and the base itself. It was jaw-dropping to me. That morning was the day i knew for certain, that my father got me. I was 10.
      I'm 71 now. I finished my working life in Aerospace when I was forced to retire early due to illness, in 2002. Remember; to be in the present moment is to slow everything down, enough to feel the new knowledge. Then it works. Then, we are.
      One.

    • @davidharrison3574
      @davidharrison3574 Год назад +5

      @@libradragon you did a great service to mankind sir. Salute to you and all the astronauts and scientists involved in space program. My childhood fascination with space and science has always provoked my interest. Hopefully you recover from all illness. I want my body in space too like Scotty ( well he had his ashes sent into space ) after my death but I might not be able to get my wish. Always wanted to be an astronaut but I am not that agile as those astronauts. 🤢

    • @salsylexhagen7423
      @salsylexhagen7423 Год назад +2

      ​@libradragon your post is so kind, generous and of course wise. Thank you for your work in this very important field.

    • @Srfs777
      @Srfs777 Год назад +2

      @@libradragonthank you for your wisdom sir.

  • @centralasianshepherd2689
    @centralasianshepherd2689 Год назад +28

    Well done guys. Looking forward to the results. 👏

    • @Breakowski
      @Breakowski Год назад

      When they will be transparent 😅

    • @kingtitusthe3rd876
      @kingtitusthe3rd876 4 месяца назад

      There might be typhons just like from the Prey game 😂 (hope not)

  • @migs192
    @migs192 Год назад +13

    1. Showed the sample at the beginning of the video and explained what was unexpectedly seen inside...
    2. Scientists were surprised and excited, not shocked and terrified.
    Now I am ready for other facts. This is a good video.

  • @firstlast5681
    @firstlast5681 Год назад +121

    They just give you this long drawn-out mess tell you what they're going to be doing in the future they never tell you what was found

    • @VINJACKS2
      @VINJACKS2 Год назад +7

      Lmfao!

    • @salsylexhagen7423
      @salsylexhagen7423 Год назад +12

      Never A Straight Answer 😂

    • @diamond_tango
      @diamond_tango Год назад +24

      The straight answer is 200 pages of jargon and math that someone who hasn’t spent the last decade in aerospace sciences wouldn’t understand.

    • @salsylexhagen7423
      @salsylexhagen7423 Год назад +16

      @diamond_tango agreed but if they want the public to support them, public support helps get bigger budget, they could present their findings and future projects in a way the public might better understand.

    • @MsHarpsychord
      @MsHarpsychord Год назад

      "Why don't they tell us what's there?"
      Gee idk maybe because they're still researching it!! You realise how much work is involved in geology right?
      They have to check the sample for every single mineral on the periodic table to figure out what was on the asteroid.
      Not to mention they have to check for any potential foreign material not native to the asteroid itself too.
      There are too many people like you are so insufferably spoiled, entitled and impatient.

  • @raymondwright5996
    @raymondwright5996 Год назад +16

    Last time scientists opened a container on the moon they accidentally released Rita Repulsa and she has been terrorizing Angel Grove ever since. They’ll never learn…

  • @jordivilaioliveras
    @jordivilaioliveras Год назад +4

    Excellent presentation. Thanks SOU!

  • @siddhashutosh
    @siddhashutosh Год назад +5

    Such a beautiful and easy explanation. Thanks

  • @susancourtney7717
    @susancourtney7717 Год назад +15

    This is probably why life started so quickly on Earth.

    • @Zync21
      @Zync21 Год назад +1

      So our origin comes from an asteroid
      Woah!

    • @andersnilsson973
      @andersnilsson973 5 месяцев назад

      Probably not.

  • @SwiFTDBL
    @SwiFTDBL Год назад +4

    "bennu is a small asteroid" proceeds to compare it to being BIGGER than the empire state building lmaoooo. (yes im aware other asteroids are even bigger lol its jus crazy to think about a solid rock that big)

    • @jason.papadim
      @jason.papadim 3 месяца назад

      Our little pale blue dot is basically just a rock. The only difference is that it's in just the right position on our solar system to support life lul.

  • @Leopez02
    @Leopez02 Год назад +89

    Thanks to Nasa im not worried about asteroids, Nasa made a history with Dart mission where spacecraft changed asteroid's direction. 🌎👨🏻‍🚀🚀🌑☀️🪐🛰☄️🌠

    • @black-n-wildentertainmentLLC
      @black-n-wildentertainmentLLC Год назад +1

      👍

    • @DavidCodyPeppers.
      @DavidCodyPeppers. Год назад +2

      It's called Hubris.
      Peace!
      \o/

    • @Nggrngr
      @Nggrngr Год назад +14

      That only works if you know where the asteroid is! Most asteroid are not known and we have unexpected near misses often. Sorry to burst your bubble

    • @Leopez02
      @Leopez02 Год назад +6

      @@Nggrngr Aphophis asteroid will be a BIG problem we don't know where it will come on year 2029 or 2036

    • @grimborn9949
      @grimborn9949 Год назад +4

      I admire your optimism, but I am not so sure about our safety.

  • @angelarredondo611
    @angelarredondo611 Год назад +16

    Question: if we’re making contact with all these potentially threatening asteroids… can’t we put tracking devices on them? Obviously the signal would take very long to reach earthif it’s on the opposite side of the sun but it can store the data and dump it when commanded to near earth

    • @plomek4706
      @plomek4706 Год назад +3

      There are thousands of asteroids in Solar System, how do you imagine doing that?

    • @kazuma2060
      @kazuma2060 Год назад +2

      I think that's why NASA, DART mission is important to counter any such asteroids coming towards earth.

    • @davidwuhrer6704
      @davidwuhrer6704 Год назад +3

      Tracking devices? They are visible through telescopes, they aren't hiding below the horizon or anything.

    • @JohnCena-le1jj
      @JohnCena-le1jj Год назад

      Well every how often are they going to ping the asteroid's location? Because there will be limited power available with little to no way of recharging once they're installed.

  • @globalwarmingsimplified9082
    @globalwarmingsimplified9082 Год назад +2

    Well presented with a terrific narrator!

  • @t3tsuyaguy1
    @t3tsuyaguy1 Год назад +3

    In hindsight, it feels like the chemistry of abiogenesis occurring in the churning conditions of the early solar system feels almost embarrassingly obvious 😁

  • @bhumidave1303
    @bhumidave1303 Год назад +2

    Loved graphics contents ...chapter wise story
    Thoroughly enjoyed 💕
    Tremandous video ❤

  • @Nischayash
    @Nischayash Год назад +2

    Why are people not liking such a interesting video!🤔

    • @leon46295
      @leon46295 Год назад +3

      Because its not what the title advertises. I wanna know about some space samples, not a history of how we got them and what could be in there.

    • @saddammalima8458
      @saddammalima8458 4 месяца назад

      They paid for that crap in space but wont get to know it's contents

  • @_0NesEc
    @_0NesEc Год назад +1

    Please don't be lazy and read it. Think about it: When we came to Earth, there was no difference between gold and coal in nature, except for the structure of the substances. We were born and began to set "prices" for them according to their rarity. The only reason why space exploration in the world is not gaining momentum right now is the "prices" we set among ourselves. The only value of the materials inside those asteroids is from a scientific perspective. In other words, mankind determined the prices of the materials in those asteroids at the time.

  • @MikMoen
    @MikMoen Год назад +4

    What worries me is unknowingly bringing back something incredibly dangerous if it gets out into Earth's ecosystem.

    • @Alvan81
      @Alvan81 10 месяцев назад

      Dangerous or not if I understand the narration some particles already were coating the outside?

    • @jman1989
      @jman1989 6 месяцев назад

      Oh well, we don't deserve to be here anyway

  • @aakeon9149
    @aakeon9149 8 месяцев назад +1

    didnt know busa boys made it to space. cool thing to witness

  • @Nanobits
    @Nanobits Год назад +14

    I am really looking forward to the data, but I am also very interested in the possible uses of asteroids for ore mining, rare minerals.

    • @Scott-ir5eg
      @Scott-ir5eg Год назад

      A fair amount of asteroid ore already ends up on earth.

    • @_0NesEc
      @_0NesEc Год назад +1

      Please don't be lazy and read it. Think about it: When we came to Earth, there was no difference between gold and coal in nature, except for the structure of the substances. We were born and began to set "prices" for them according to their rarity. The only reason why space exploration in the world is not gaining momentum right now is the "prices" we set among ourselves. The only value of the materials inside those asteroids is from a scientific perspective. In other words, mankind determined the prices of the materials in those asteroids at the time

    • @Scott-ir5eg
      @Scott-ir5eg Год назад +1

      @@_0NesEc space exploration has far too much momentum in my opinion. Wasted funds that would be better off used in restructuring our means of energy and consumption, as well as waste mitigation. But it seems that we’re pretty set on giving up. The answer isn’t off-world.

    • @davidwuhrer6704
      @davidwuhrer6704 Год назад

      ​@@Scott-ir5egSpace exploration is cheap compared to fossil fuel subsidies.

    • @_0NesEc
      @_0NesEc Год назад

      @@Scott-ir5eg When we look at the wasted amounts for global trade, the money that has been spent for space exploration becomes an amount that don’t even deserve caution.

  • @hottox8221
    @hottox8221 Год назад +1

    The math and everything needed to have the return capsule launch from space and land where it's suppose to amazes me everytime

    • @floridakid7975
      @floridakid7975 Год назад

      because its fake so you are easily amazed I guess

    • @GodMikhael
      @GodMikhael Год назад

      @@floridakid7975 i was thinking the same as you but seems like we are the only one in this comment section..

    • @captainlengthwidth6692
      @captainlengthwidth6692 Год назад

      What is fake? @@floridakid7975

  • @CaptainHowdy-c3y
    @CaptainHowdy-c3y Год назад +9

    Someone mentioned a camera but a radio beacon would be fun. I'm not sure about the requirements to track a signal in space but not all of us live in observatories and have not just calculated but visual capabilities. We should do that for all near earth objects so we can all be prepared for our impending doom.

    • @davidwuhrer6704
      @davidwuhrer6704 Год назад

      What's the difference between a radio beacon and reflected sunlight for the purpose of tracking its source?
      The difference is that tracking a radio source is more difficult. And the asteroids already reflect sunlight all the time.
      (Radio is not visible light, so you need a radio observatory instead of a telescope; a radio sends on one frequency, not a Gaussian spectrum like black body radiation, so you can't catch it just approximately (well technically you can, but the margin is much smaller); radio waves are a lot longer than visible light (meters or tens of meters compared to tenths of micrometers), so you need much bigger equipment. And radio needs an energy source, and you may need an active antenna to capture it, while reflecting sunlight requires no special equipment, and it is bright enough to be visible without an amplifier.)

  • @frontiersman-n5n
    @frontiersman-n5n Год назад +1

    They opened this on the 26th which was my birthday!

  • @TheCaptainSplatter
    @TheCaptainSplatter Год назад +8

    In Soviet russia earth hits you

  • @gs9771
    @gs9771 6 месяцев назад +1

    that is how mankind should use rockets instead of war

  • @robbyjobarton2637
    @robbyjobarton2637 Год назад +15

    Great job NASA 👍🏽

  • @groovejet77
    @groovejet77 Год назад +1

    So happy you use the metric system

  • @whitezkullgamer1018
    @whitezkullgamer1018 Год назад +3

    Scientist 1: Are you sure Johnny this pod doesn't have Face hugger
    Scientist 2: No, silly that's is not real. it's science movie fiction.
    Scientist 3: yeah
    Scientist 1: oh! then why the pod shaking violently?! ill never open that shit!
    Scientist 2: fine!! ill do it you coward, see guys there is no....
    **Facehugger Pounce**
    Scientist 2: get it of mmmmmphhh...!!!! **muffled**
    Scientist 1: oh shit!! Scientist 3
    contianed that alien!
    **Scientist 3 Runs and leave colleagues and shuts the door**
    Scientist 1: *Don't leave me here Micheal!!!!!*

  • @chesterwhipplefilter3878
    @chesterwhipplefilter3878 Год назад +1

    Waited for this!!!

  • @BillyJupiter
    @BillyJupiter Год назад +3

    1 question. What if they'd scooped up an alien by accident? And basically gave it a lyft

    • @SRDPS2
      @SRDPS2 Год назад

      Doom awardness
      mean we ain't only advanced species in entire universe and they have potential as thread
      You know like our colonization

  • @-Heartz
    @-Heartz Год назад +1

    I just smoked a fat joint I'm ready to watch this😁

  • @cthunter41
    @cthunter41 Год назад +9

    I can't even find my keys half the time and these guys collected rocks a billion miles away😂.

  • @jgrant5255
    @jgrant5255 Год назад +1

    Seeing the clean room reinforces my laughter at the so called alien found in Mexico 😅

  • @sobreaver
    @sobreaver Год назад +19

    So, I know nothing more than before I watch this video, nice. What unexpected things ? Dust ? 240 g more dust than they planned, ok.

  • @mayankvishnani6333
    @mayankvishnani6333 Год назад +1

    Please start you discovery series. Back again. That was amazing

  • @rickrack4812
    @rickrack4812 Год назад +5

    Maybe that black dust got onto the deck due to STATIC attraction.

    • @yisahkelvin1532
      @yisahkelvin1532 Год назад

      That actually happened the day it fall down to earth 🌎

  • @stevenjohns-savage7024
    @stevenjohns-savage7024 9 месяцев назад

    Thanks good work team 👍😊

  • @Masterfighterx
    @Masterfighterx Год назад +3

    I know it's just ''dust'' and ''rocks'' but I really wanna see the stuff they pull out from the module at high res.

    • @josephwinder6878
      @josephwinder6878 Год назад +1

      I doubt it's as exciting as it seems

    • @davidwuhrer6704
      @davidwuhrer6704 Год назад +1

      Professor May has posted a video on his channel of the radiologic scan of the first dust particle recovered from Osiris. Very high res.
      It's just a grain of dust, but it has sharp edges and a high metal content.

  • @direbearcoat7551
    @direbearcoat7551 Год назад

    Great video! This is exciting stuff!

  • @saymodaymo
    @saymodaymo Год назад +3

    So the "dead" sample, "grew" 100 grams along the trip? what a trip!.

  • @SamusKerrigan
    @SamusKerrigan Год назад +1

    It's Wednesday and we didn't get any video last Sunday, again...

  • @tightleft37iso56
    @tightleft37iso56 Год назад +7

    What elements did they find in the dust? Nickel, copper, silver, gold?

    • @Jabarri74
      @Jabarri74 Год назад +1

      I highly doubt youd find elements rare on earth in high abundancies on primitive asteroids. As mentioned in the video the Earth will accumulate them via magma and so forth not present on asteroids. Unless I suppose the asteroid was made from a dying sun which is where the heavier elements come from as we are told

    • @fctucycy8v8yvy67
      @fctucycy8v8yvy67 Год назад +2

      @@Jabarri74 On earth, heavy metals sink to the core because they are well, heavy. Ig in an environment with low gravity, heavy metals won't separate from the lighter metals.

    • @Jabarri74
      @Jabarri74 Год назад

      @@fctucycy8v8yvy67 I think what I meant was that I suppose it depends what the asteroid was originally, a star or a planet who knows with the age of the solar system. Its an interesting thought though do atoms undergo fusion as part of the planet making process as the spiral of gas closes in on itself

  • @breakmutiny5733
    @breakmutiny5733 Год назад

    Really cool screen saver compilation

  • @ericpitt3876
    @ericpitt3876 Год назад +26

    I wonder what life forms can be created from these samples.

    • @AliSpace-yj8qv
      @AliSpace-yj8qv Год назад +1

      Hi i have a question do you want to join my space community?

    • @denishennessy1318
      @denishennessy1318 Год назад +3

      Chickens

    • @jonnyd9351
      @jonnyd9351 Год назад +1

      Even the smallest cell on earth is at least 100 billion times as large as the molecules found.

    • @davidwuhrer6704
      @davidwuhrer6704 Год назад

      📎 It looks like you are trying to create life. Do you need any help with that?

    • @ericpitt3876
      @ericpitt3876 Год назад +1

      Thanks for the offer but I’m good…

  • @dallasscandling6329
    @dallasscandling6329 Год назад +1

    Yarkovsky effect blew my mind

  • @hassanahmedbarbhuiya3603
    @hassanahmedbarbhuiya3603 Год назад +3

    ❤❤❤❤❤❤from Barak valley,,,Assam,,,,India

  • @murnoth
    @murnoth Год назад +1

    Plot twist: These asteroids are the remnants of an older planets that we migrated from before being destroyed in an event and that explains the amino acids

  • @kimberlyperrotis8962
    @kimberlyperrotis8962 Год назад +4

    What an amazing mission! Scientists are doing the unimaginable.

  • @babyboo600
    @babyboo600 Год назад

    what a high quality video ! truly amazed !

  • @Austincallahan9823
    @Austincallahan9823 Год назад +3

    Someone should make diamonds with heat friction of our gravity falling back to earth

    • @davidwuhrer6704
      @davidwuhrer6704 Год назад

      You don't make diamonds with heat. You make diamonds with pressure.

    • @Austincallahan9823
      @Austincallahan9823 Год назад

      @@davidwuhrer6704 true but space is a vacuum and is negative pressure so still send carbon to space and let it form naturally in space and scientists say that there are potentially larger specimens deep with in the earth

  • @andrejohnson5928
    @andrejohnson5928 6 месяцев назад

    Amazing content. Thank you

  • @lmwlmw4468
    @lmwlmw4468 Год назад +5

    Of course it did. An electrically charged capsule has that effect on dust and some small particles...!!!!

  • @leaf-edit1234
    @leaf-edit1234 Год назад +1

    Sou: 19hrs ago
    While unsigned 🗿: 7days ago

  • @faultline3936
    @faultline3936 Год назад +5

    So it's pretty much confirming that life is more than likely to exists in other planets, specially in those goldilocks zones

  • @BrandonHardaker
    @BrandonHardaker Год назад +1

    Very cool and informative

  • @andrehinds4804
    @andrehinds4804 Год назад +3

    7:04 they should be wearing 🥽 goggles

  • @SullySadface
    @SullySadface Год назад

    Fun fact: Geological phenomenon includes atmospheric effects for things like erosion, so NASA has brought back what is basically a cloud of microscopic scalpels

  • @JohnWarner-lu8rq
    @JohnWarner-lu8rq Год назад +14

    The chance of DNA "developing" on it's own is like finding one particular atom in the universe.

    • @GhostBearCommander
      @GhostBearCommander Год назад +11

      DNA literally can’t “develop” on its own.
      It needs polypeptides to aid in this endeavor. The same is true in reverse. DNA sequences code for the amino acid sequences and folds in polypeptides. As such, you cannot have one without the other.
      That’s why Abiogenesis is such a bunk hypothesis.

    • @JohnWarner-lu8rq
      @JohnWarner-lu8rq Год назад

      @@GhostBearCommander You have about 10 trillion cells in your body, so if you stretched the DNA in all the cells out, end to end, they'd stretch over 744 million miles. The moon is only about 250,000 miles away, so all your DNA would stretch to the moon and back almost 1500 times. The sun is 93,000,000 miles away, so your DNA would reach there and back about 4 times!
      The complex DNA code was a product of intelligent design, just like the binary code. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure it out, but do you want proof? Here’s proof: Fifty two leading evolutionary biologists and mathematicians came together in Philadelphia to answer the following question:
      Given 3.5 billion years, in absolute perfect conditions, what is the chance of even a single DNA molecule evolving? The answer they came up with: one chance out of ten to the 80th power. That’s quite a large number to comprehend. To put it in perspective, that's the estimated number of atoms that compose the universe. So the probability of a DNA molecule evolving, are as good as locating one singly marked atom out there in the universe somewhere.

    • @artstrology
      @artstrology Год назад

      Humans have detected and tracked recurring energies of unknown source for over 7,000 years. They form what is known as the 20 day cycle and are known in all cultures.. Each day is distinctly detectable and trackable in a variety of ways. The 20 standard amino acids appear likely to have derived from those same recurring energies, as they instantaneously correlate with the functions and properties of the amino acids, and even have the same interactions and relations like Tyrosine and Phenylalanine. Now we need to find the source of the energies, and what they are. I suspect wave forms of some type,.@@GhostBearCommander

    • @jonnyd9351
      @jonnyd9351 Год назад +2

      Ya it’s a very very loose theory. It’s more of a “well idk what else would’ve happened” than an actual, defensible theory.

    • @kimberlyperrotis8962
      @kimberlyperrotis8962 Год назад +2

      Keep studying math and science and you will be!🙂

  • @Ampaomike
    @Ampaomike Год назад +2

    This explains why there so many new species on earth out of nowhere.
    Probably the asteroids are just package components of life and it brings to earth for a new more species we've yet to seen
    If that's the case then we shouldn't interfere the asteroids doing if that's what keeps the earth thriving since the beginning

  • @honodle7219
    @honodle7219 Год назад +3

    And yet very little on what the material is composed of.

  • @marshalepage5330
    @marshalepage5330 11 месяцев назад

    If you wanted a cleaner sample of an asteroid then you should mix the sample in epoxy resin on the asteroid. Sealing the sample in a liquid that turns solid would create a better seal than any ordinary seal.

  • @abdulhalim9650
    @abdulhalim9650 Год назад +4

    Golden rule is always to expect the unexpected...

    • @IanMacKaye-eg8hd
      @IanMacKaye-eg8hd Год назад +1

      I thought it was to treat others how you’d like to be treated? Have I been lied to?!

  • @wayneyadams
    @wayneyadams Год назад +6

    9:09 All you do when you concoct this tale of life arriving on asteroids is push the question back to when and where the life on the asteroid originated. Did it magically appear out of nothing? Are you claiming it somehow formed in the depths of space, in which case isn't it far more likely life originated here where conditions were more favorable. Perhap advanced aliens seede the Earth, which just leads to the question of what were their origins?

    • @jodibraun6383
      @jodibraun6383 Год назад +3

      He said *ingredients* for life, such as amino acids and other molecules, not life.

    • @IanMacKaye-eg8hd
      @IanMacKaye-eg8hd Год назад +1

      I thought you were gonna get all Book of Genesis on me there for a second. You scared me. But like person above stated, just some components to kickstart abiogenesis could have came from an asteroid, not the life form itself.

  • @mashal2567
    @mashal2567 Год назад

    This is so cool. These people got the best job.

  • @rts100x5
    @rts100x5 Год назад +23

    ANDROMEDA STRAIN

  • @TheAngelArrow
    @TheAngelArrow Год назад +1

    "apophis will make a close approach to earth" *shows a clip of it flying straight into earth* 💀

  • @llewellyndredge8311
    @llewellyndredge8311 Год назад +3

    I find this funny, they can get a sample from a asteroid by landing and taking off again, but I can't land on the moon again 😅

    • @josephwinder6878
      @josephwinder6878 Год назад +1

      One can land on the moon. Just no one really wants to

    • @davidwuhrer6704
      @davidwuhrer6704 Год назад +2

      The moon is bigger. Bennu has next to no gravity, so you can just pull alongside it at a leisurely pace and get your samples.
      With the moon, when you approach the surface you are going thousands of kilometres per second with no atmosphere to slow you down. To get to a stop at the surface you have to use rockets to slow down, but slowing down sideways means you start falling onto the surface instead, and you don't want to crash at such speeds, so you have to use rockets to break your fall just in time that you stop on the surface, not a hundred kilometres above or below it. And the surface isn't exactly smooth, there's craters all over it.

    • @SRDPS2
      @SRDPS2 Год назад

      Moon landing is too risk
      When return, it's like launch rocket as like launch from earth except required less thrust

  • @ecoloscabos
    @ecoloscabos Год назад +1

    Plot twist: dark dust residues are the first samples of dark matter collected through space.

  • @thetalantonx
    @thetalantonx Год назад +5

    The naming scheme for these objects and missions is honestly freaking me out a little. They've either read too much or not enough cosmic horror.

    • @Born2Fight4PAIN
      @Born2Fight4PAIN Год назад +1

      I think you read too much yeah

    • @RolexTimex
      @RolexTimex Год назад

      They're discreetly admitting NASA only exists because of ancient Egyptian knowledge.

  • @housetraitor4806
    @housetraitor4806 Год назад +1

    So our children’s children could potentially see Earth Impacted by this asteroid

  • @PaulSherman-v3r
    @PaulSherman-v3r Год назад +6

    Gotta say that I am NOT thrilled that an unknown ET material slopped out of the collector and I question the practice of examining said material in our biosphere regardless of "Containment Measures".

    • @davidwuhrer6704
      @davidwuhrer6704 Год назад

      It's almost certainly not from inside the sample canister. If it were, the sample would be almost worthless.

    • @jman1989
      @jman1989 6 месяцев назад

      Humans suck at everything, it's only a matter of time

  • @Leesaps
    @Leesaps Год назад +1

    The biggest threat to our Earth would be asteroid impact that might could be a voided or sonic weapon that find it's frequency and break or vaporize it. Use "Star Treks" ideas, we have before.

  • @DisventureTess
    @DisventureTess Год назад +3

    Hi 😊

  • @ICYDRAGONS
    @ICYDRAGONS Год назад +1

    It's cool that there was potential water or something

  • @H.O.P.E.1122
    @H.O.P.E.1122 Год назад +14

    Can dust on outside of canister introduce new germs on Earth? If yes, was this recently-arrived canister a danger?

    • @Pyxis10
      @Pyxis10 Год назад +1

      No. There are no germs in there for it to introduce to earth.

    • @kaponkotrok
      @kaponkotrok Год назад +15

      Yes, but we all walking funny anyway 😂

    • @NuVids2025
      @NuVids2025 Год назад +4

      What if they put all this alien dust or bacterias in the you know what to see what happens? 🐙 🦑

    • @RolexTimex
      @RolexTimex Год назад

      They said from the beginning that the astroid was potentially hazardous. Too late.... watch the weather patterns since it arrived on earth.

    • @cindyspear5763
      @cindyspear5763 Год назад

      Do you know how hot the exterior of the capsule became as it passed into Earth's atmosphere? That would kill any and all known earth level pathogens. There's always a possibility that something might survive that superheated entry to earth, but Earth receives anywhere from 5 tons of space dust to 300 tons of space dust - PER DAY, just from its normal orbit. If there are any space traveling pathogens out there, they're hitting earth ALL of the time, and have been doing so for billions of years.

  • @mattramos3548
    @mattramos3548 Год назад +1

    how many people thought they saw a UFO when this canister re entered earth.

  • @rentlastname2824
    @rentlastname2824 Год назад +3

    Amino acids from space will be the next big thing.

    • @cor2250
      @cor2250 Год назад

      Bring back virus ,you never know

    • @davidwuhrer6704
      @davidwuhrer6704 Год назад +1

      ​​@@cor2250A virus can't reproduce by itself, it needs a suitable host. The host must exist first for the virus to become possible.

  • @mioarabucur8791
    @mioarabucur8791 Год назад

    Finally all asteroids contains different life forms from different planets. We must watch them because they can change our lives forever.🙏✝️

  • @Churchill9050
    @Churchill9050 Год назад +2

    Didn't any of these people see The Andromeda Strain...geez.

    • @davidwuhrer6704
      @davidwuhrer6704 Год назад

      No, but I read the book.
      I don't see the relevance.

  • @soubhagyagrover2630
    @soubhagyagrover2630 Год назад +1

    You can almost smell a chat gpt script these days

  • @nauga2295
    @nauga2295 Год назад +5

    still amazing how all of these projects are paid by the tax payers, yet we never see the money at work. These asteroid drillings should be live-streamed.

    • @MsHarpsychord
      @MsHarpsychord Год назад +3

      Bro what did you want them to do, build a colony on an asteroid? 😂
      Maybe if trillions wasn't spent on the military we would have colonies on the moon already. I don't think you realise just how expensive space travel is.
      Nasa has said numerous times " we CAN do this, we CAN put a telescope on the moon. Just PAY us more"

    • @nauga2295
      @nauga2295 Год назад

      @@MsHarpsychorddid you even read what I wrote? And if you did, you don’t understand it?

    • @xxdenxxlast8877
      @xxdenxxlast8877 Год назад +1

      ​@@MsHarpsychordhe just want it livestreamed😂 read his comment first

    • @MsHarpsychord
      @MsHarpsychord Год назад

      Lmao Nasa *did* do a livestream of their recovery, it's 3.5 hours long! You hardly want them livestreaming every day they clock into work from 9 -5?@@xxdenxxlast8877

    • @davidwuhrer6704
      @davidwuhrer6704 Год назад

      There was no asteroid drilling, and there is a live stream of every NASA mission.

  • @lonewulf978
    @lonewulf978 Год назад

    I thought it was neat when they took the sample from Bennu that it was mostly made of gravel on its surface. The puematic sample collector basically blew a crater on the surface of the astoroid. And we got more material than expected which will be great for research no doubt.

  • @markskaggs5493
    @markskaggs5493 Год назад +3

    Ok, great. Now lets go to Mars moon Phobos and find out what that structure is on its' surface.

  • @user-dt3rj8qm3k
    @user-dt3rj8qm3k Месяц назад

    Can you imagine if Bennu's original flight path was initially going to miss Earth's orbit and by touching down and collecting the sample/blasting off again, accidentally shifted Bennu's trajectory making it's future path to collide with our planet? 😅😅😅

  • @Spacestorm50
    @Spacestorm50 Год назад +5

    Every asteroid or comets should have a tracking device on it and ping back the distance it's is periodically then we would have a great layout and map with the data and everything could be tracked and have threatening space objects to ping back an alert if within a danger zone to humanity would make everything easier it would be a tiny rocket drone with a spider bot form that would have a tiny drill in the under belly of it like can be used as an anchor point and or could have an embedded sensor within said anchor point and ping back the composition data and sense it would have a spider body it's legs would be more mailable with more joint points and could flex 360 degrees and reverse and inside out incase on falling over and it becoming incapacitated. Tiny solar panel could be used. These could be a possible "Swarm" Capabible to cover more areas but only have 1 "host Bot" that would only be capable of transitioning it's data, the other bot that would come out of the "host bot" would be sharinf the ride within the capsule and would be actived to be able to move around based on directions given from us in earth to the "host bot" antenna receiver.

    • @rharris22222
      @rharris22222 Год назад +1

      You're way off on scale. There are millions of asteroids. A single rendezvous like this one costs tens of millions of dollars.
      As for comets, most of them spend most of their time far beyond Pluto's orbit, where we have sent less than 10 probes at a cost of hundreds of millions of dollars each.
      We just don't have the resources, but we do have radar, which is why we track via radar.
      By the time humans have the ability to put a tracker on every asteroid, we will have converted 99% of them into orbital factories, farms, and houses, and the remaining 1% will be space parks for our distant descendants.
      Our radar and space-based telescopes are getting better all the time so I think we will eventually track everything bigger than a tennis ball, and probably will have an array of tracking stations out in the various belts.
      But we'll never have sensors on every one for the same reason you don't have a different cell phone for every person you know. Just too many.

    • @josephwinder6878
      @josephwinder6878 Год назад

      There's not enough devices

    • @davidwuhrer6704
      @davidwuhrer6704 Год назад

      What do you mean by "ping back"?
      Like, make itself visible to detectors on Earth? The way their reflecting sunlight already does without the need of a power source and fragile technical equipment?

  • @Giuntafamily
    @Giuntafamily Год назад +3

    😮😮 So cool

  • @dannywhipple358
    @dannywhipple358 5 месяцев назад

    When we use our collective knowledge this is what we accomplish gives me hope

  • @gailmrutland6508
    @gailmrutland6508 Год назад +9

    *I was initially shocked and then horrified to see the sample being opened in less then a bio hazard level 4 containment room. I am hoping that was just a simulation or practice run we viewed, if it was the actual opening then we have become VERY STUPID INDEED!*

    • @georgespalding7640
      @georgespalding7640 Год назад +9

      I'm sure that NASA is a lot smarter than the people here in the comments section.

    • @mjolnirswrath23
      @mjolnirswrath23 Год назад +2

      ​@absolutemadchad8637their Eyes were exposed...not wearing a Level 4 bio hazard CBRN Suit nor Oxygen supply....
      The Fact that they Didn't shows not only how incompetent they now are " But also YOUR lack of Knowledge as well

    • @Iveyenahs
      @Iveyenahs Год назад +1

      Yes, they want to see how much the masses will accept as fact. Apparently have not hit that line except for a few like myself, hopefully more. Critical thinking skills people. I said we did this is not evidence, th gvmnt says ir and we have pics is not evidence.etc.

    • @gailmrutland6508
      @gailmrutland6508 Год назад +3

      @@georgespalding7640 *Sorry George, it was just my 17 years at the Department Of Agriculture ( PIADC ) running the level 4 lab on Plum Island talking. You are so right, a cutting edge agency like NASA surely knows more. Hell it only took them 60 years to try and do what Elon Musk did in 6 (and it actually works). Hey George, keep the day job son.*

    • @georgespalding7640
      @georgespalding7640 Год назад +1

      @@gailmrutland6508 So you really think they would take a chance on contaminating the sample they got from this mission? This Mission took many years from concept to construct to the actual flight itself and cost enormous amounts of money. NASA has done a great job when they put their mind to it. They sent us to the Moon in less than 10 years time with old technology, I think they still know what they're doing.

  • @augustbruce
    @augustbruce 4 месяца назад

    Amazing the amount of what if's, maybes, and supposes certain scientists can dream up from a piece of space rock.