The fun part is the star didn't actually die in 1054- thats just when the light of the super nova finally reached us. Depending on how many light years away it was, the star could have died centuries beforehand.
Of course, the final phase of the star was a crab... everything evolves into crab at the end 🦀 Edit:Ngl I'm surprised at how many people know this completely random trivia on the effeciency and superior design of 🦀
My favorite is the eruption of krakatoa, it's right around that time, that humans developed long-range Communications through telephones, so that was one of the first major events communicated worldwide. and it was also heard worldwide, so everybody heard it, but everybody was able to simultaneously and instantly communicate what had happened.
Something kinda cool: in anywhere ranging from a few decades to a few centuries, we're gonna do it again. The star Betelgeuse, which is 600 light years away, is on the brink of a supernova. It recently (In stellar timescales) underwent a huge expansion, making the star with a mass about 10-20 times that of the sun be so large that if you were to replace the sun with it, it would engulf the asteroid belt. This expansion marks the beginning of the end. It means the star ran out of hydrogen fuel, and is now doing nuclear fusion on helium instead. The final phase of a star's lifespan. Betelgeuse, being such a large star, will undergo a supernova, one which will be as bright as a half moon, and clearly visible during the day, for three months. Lucky I only said the star's name twice, huh?
It's better than that - there are frequent supernova. Get yourself a decent telescope and wait for the next one! You just missed the last one this spring!
@@sergio.6137 no, crab people predate the term “version”, so I will fix your sentance for you: you meant to say this; CRAB PEOPKE CRAB NEBULA LOOK LIKE NEBULA MADE LIKE CRAB CRAB CRAB PEOPLE PEOPLE VERSION CRAB???!? CRAB VERSION PEOPLE NEBULA CRAB CRAB CRAB.
Here’s a stupid question… if earth is 6500 light years away from an alien civilization with the power to travel faster that the speed of light, would that civilization see dinosaurs when they got here? And would a human on earth given the same technology today be able to travel back in time by just traveling that fast to the spot the earth would be 6500 light years ago?
Ok but imagine the sheer energy to be so bright that the explosion at your death continues for two years before it's over. Hell of a way to go out ngl.
This is also where the term Nova comes from. Nova meant new in Latin and the supernova was called a Nova because they thought it was a new star. After they figured out that it wasn't actually a new star, they continued to call the event Novas and Supernovas because of the event.
@@Lizzhm Good bet it served as a lot of folks' "sign" to act on the building tensions when they did, though. There were probably lengthy debates about "what God was telling them" with it for at least the next decade.
"And God said, “Let there be lights in the expanse of the heavens to separate the day from the night. And let them be for signs and for seasons, and for days and years, and let them be lights in the expanse of the heavens to give light upon the earth.” And it was so." -Genesis 1:14-15 (ESV)
There was also a "new star" discovered just under 500 years ago, viewed and recorded by Johannes Kepler's teacher Tycho Brahe. For those who dont know, Kepler is the same kepler as the one who made Kepler's laws of ellipses in math. He made very many discoveries in astronomy, but only because he had Brahe's astronomy notes. Brahe spent most of his life very detailedly recording star and planet movements :)
@@PokeMageTech oh my god, am I about to introduce you to the Brahe house of fun? Okay, so he was rich. Like one of the richest people in Italy and rich people like to party, but Brahe like to party more than most, he also liked dwarfs. So tycho Brahe bought a dwarf that followed him around and would entertain him at parties. Actually Brahe died because he held his pee to long at a party that he was hosting, because leaving your guests and going to the bathroom was a sign of disrespect.
@@randomguy1453Oh you’re right, I know the date and it didn’t even click in my head :o I don’t know if the supernova became visible before or after the schism but that’s funny to think about
Another really interesting star story is the "seven sisters" dreaming of Aboriginal Australia that proves the existence of Aboriginal Peoples long before we thought. The story is based off of a constellation of seven stars, representing the sisters. However, one of the stars disappeared from view about one hundred thousand years ago, proving that Aboriginal Peoples were around to see it and pass it down thousands and thousands of years to the present day. We know that the seventh star is there, but to the naked eye it is invisible and has been for millennia.
@@jakeraught4939 No, they are not. That is racist and disgusting. Neanderthals were a different species entirely, and Aboriginal Australians are as intelligent and capable as any other group of people. Please delete this comment as it is hateful and incorrect.
@@gemmabarkertomkins idk who you were responding too, sounded like they said something rude, but... Factually speaking, Australian Aboriginals are part Neanderthal. As is literally everyone on earth outside of the majority of sub Saharan Africans, though some of them actually have Neanderthal DNA as well. Aboriginal Australians not only have Neanderthal DNA, they even ALSO have Denisovan DNA, another species of early human. Again, outside of Sub Saharan Africans, there are no 100% homo sapiens. I'm sure you were just responding to a derogatory comment, but factually speaking you're wrong. And it's not a bad thing, unless you're 100% sub Saharan African you're also part Neanderthal, and if you're Asian, Polynesian, or Aboriginal Australian you're likely also part Denisovan. Cheers my not fully human buddy! Lol Btw, very interesting original comment. I'm gonna look into that, stuff like that fascinates me. Doesn't surprise me at all either. I do not believe we have gotten ancient human evolution/history correct whatsoever, and am not surprised at all by your statement. Funny thing is I don't even fully agree with the lines drawn between Homo Sapiens, Neanderthals, and Denisovans being that there is almost as much genetic variance between ancient Homo Sapiens as between them and Neanderthals, as well as the fact that these so called "different species", every one recovered came from the same ancient male lineage as Homo Sapiens. How different could they have been? Especially considering that I myself am obviously a "human", but am part Neanderthal, and how Australian Aboriginals in this case are obviously "human" but are both Neanderthal and Denisovan. It really makes you wonder, what is the real definition of a "human"? Because clearly we haven't defined it perfectly. If only Homo Sapiens are "human" then only sub Saharan African black people, and not even all of them, are pure humans. Sorry to drag on about it, I just find it super interesting, and since from your original comment I can tell you are interested in human history, as am I, I thought you might like to know about our genetic intermingling with other supposedly "non human" humans, lol
@@HaltDieKlappa Hi! Thank you for your comment, it was very interesting and I love learning things like this. I assumed Aboriginal Australians did not have Neanderthal in them for some reason or another- and yes, the original comment was very rude and I think it referred to Aboriginal Peoples as primitive or something along those lines, saying that they were adjacent to Neanderthals in comparison to non-Aboriginal people. Personally I don't believe that we are per se "better" than our previous humanoid fellow species/relatives (I have noticed that as a society we seem to enjoy drawing hard lines between things- gender, species, race- so it doesn't surprise me that history isn't as boxed up as we like to think), and I hope that some day we can move past using them as an insult to imply being lesser or less intelligent or worthy of respect, and recognise that we are no more important than any other living thing on the planet just because we label ourselves as smarter. Thank you for taking time to write your comment, I found it very interesting!
@@gemmabarkertomkins Yeah I figured, lot of racists out there. And I totally agree. In fact since Neanderthals had significantly larger brain cases than modern Homo Sapiens you could argue they were likely even possibly more intelligent. Also the Neanderthals at Shanidar in Iraq to my knowledge are the oldest example of a human species caring for their injured/crippled. Many of the subjects were found with injuries that would have completely prevented them from hunting, gathering, performing any demanding physical roles... yet, all of these near fatal crippling injuries showed signs of healing, years of healing, complete healing, meaning that their tribe/group/family cared for them, despite their inability to contribute to important activities like hunting, the most important activity, since large scale agriculture wouldn't exist until 10s of thousands of years later. I think caring for your sick and old shows civilization, and being that Neanderthals are the oldest examples of this, you could argue they were more advanced in ways. Anyway, thanks again for your comment, human history is really one of the most fascinating subjects if not the most, partially because no matter what, we will never fully know all the details. At least that makes it fascinating to me. There will always be some mystery.
The collapse event pulls the matter into the center at close the speed of light, or like ¼, I don't remember the numbers, just insanely fast And then bounces of the iron core (as nothing fuses beyond iron in a star) The bouncing of the correct is the supernova and likely also frakking fast
@@groot710 nah depending on the size of the dying star it's basically just a tinier sun that may or may not be visible during the day. SN2023ixf might still be visible right now with a telescope as an example.
There's going to be a Nova this year, T Coronae Borealis. It won't be a *Super* Nova, so it will only be a medium brightness star; about as brigbt as the north star. Still, it's better than nothing!
It's not a sudden thing. Happens gradually over thousands and sometimes millions of years. We've imaged just about every stage of this but have not watched the whole event on a single star
You can. You just need a strong telescope. It takes countless human lifetimes for a start to be created though, so you can't really witness the whole thing. You can find stars that ar in the process of forming, thouh. Think of a giant cloud getting more and more dense over time until a light starts to emerge in the center of it where slowly a ball of plasma comes to be, sucking in the rest of the cloud, getting bigger and brighter in the process. /edit: Just realized I kinda wasted my time explaining it lmao. Uh well.
@@cravenstatue5264I made a video as well replying to you, it’s called CRAAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAAB NEBULA LOOK LIKE NEBULA, MADE LIKE CRAB CRAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAB NEBULA
@@1992djgI have something also for you to witness. Here is is: CRAAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAAB NEBULA LOOK LIKE NEBULA, MADE LIKE CRAB CRAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAB NEBULA
Your comment was the closest to reality out of all comments I’ve replied to on this thread, just remember one thing please which is CRAAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAAB NEBULA LOOK LIKE NEBULA, MADE LIKE CRAB CRAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAB NEBULA
That's the most metal thing I've ever heard. Most of the world saw this star burn brightest for a career if about 2 yrs, but in reality, the star was going out in a blaze of glory. When their career was over, they left behind something new and even more glorious.
The gas in that nebula has most of its velocity still, so it will keep growing. Eventually some of the gas may crash into another gas cloud which can trigger new star formation 😊
I mean, it is just a very, *very* thin cloud and it doesn't really look like in the photos with human eyes. The actual view you would have if you were floating basically anywhere in outer space would be complete darkness with a few dots of light here and there. (unless when you're close to a sun, then you'd either see one slightly brighter dot of light or you'd be cooked alive within your space suit from the radiaton. The typical photographies of cosmological objects and formations is usually just a representaions of how space would look like if single gas particles floating in space with inches or even miles in between each one of them would radiate very colorful light. Space isn't really that colorful.
@@erickck240no you don’t. I’ll tell you what space is really like. Space is really like CRAAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAAB NEBULA LOOK LIKE NEBULA, MADE LIKE CRAB CRAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAB NEBULA
Jeez dont tell people what those are... how are we going to endoctrinate people into religion if they understand that what happens in the sky isn't the work of magic?
That's really cool. I knew that astronomy has been going on for thousands of years, but it never occurred to be before how things like nebulae that we observe today would've looked totally different, or have even have been brand new events in cosmic history, to the people observing the sky way back when.
I love the fact that the Crab Nebula is only what it looks like after 1000 years. It could look so much different as it comes to be in the same age range as a lot of famous nebulae are now
I am fascinated by this event. How incredible it must have been to witness another point of light in the sky that shines nearly as bright as the moon! If it ever happens in my lifetime i will be so hyped lmao.
The fun part is the star didn't actually die in 1054- thats just when the light of the super nova finally reached us. Depending on how many light years away it was, the star could have died centuries beforehand.
Crab nebula is 6500 light years from Earth
So it died 6500 years before 1054 CE.
@@sorrenblitz805AD.
Also mean something insane is probably happening right now that they won’t see for generations
@@sorrenblitz805AD
20s: “you’ve seen the bite of 87?”
10s: “nah but we’ve seen the supernova of 54”
:V
*WAS THAT THE SUPERNOVA OF 54*
@@Mr.Polymonstrum901😂😂😂
Of course, the final phase of the star was a crab... everything evolves into crab at the end 🦀
Edit:Ngl I'm surprised at how many people know this completely random trivia on the effeciency and superior design of 🦀
reject humanity and become monkey? nah become crab
CRAB RAVE TIME!
@@mikoartz5006techincally speaking, we are crabs, we got claw hands
@@frogsecretaryofswamp452 YASS
My dog died and we had crab for dinner😰
the fact humanity witnessed and recorded the birth of a whole NEBULA is insane to me i love itt
Mind blowing 🤯
Yeah if I remember right it was the same star that led the wise men😂
@@Yokyle4356 Is this a joke about the bible not being true or?
@schloany4479 how so this star is the Jesus star I think
i find it fascinating that we can see how different parts of the world without communication reacted together to the same event
Livestreaming before it was cool
@@Threattonationalsecurity😂
My favorite is the eruption of krakatoa, it's right around that time, that humans developed long-range Communications through telephones, so that was one of the first major events communicated worldwide. and it was also heard worldwide, so everybody heard it, but everybody was able to simultaneously and instantly communicate what had happened.
I didn't know that there were people who got to witness a supernova in person, that's sick as hell
Something kinda cool: in anywhere ranging from a few decades to a few centuries, we're gonna do it again. The star Betelgeuse, which is 600 light years away, is on the brink of a supernova. It recently (In stellar timescales) underwent a huge expansion, making the star with a mass about 10-20 times that of the sun be so large that if you were to replace the sun with it, it would engulf the asteroid belt. This expansion marks the beginning of the end. It means the star ran out of hydrogen fuel, and is now doing nuclear fusion on helium instead. The final phase of a star's lifespan. Betelgeuse, being such a large star, will undergo a supernova, one which will be as bright as a half moon, and clearly visible during the day, for three months.
Lucky I only said the star's name twice, huh?
@@CountDooku420 SSPANGTONG G SPANGTONG????
seriously though thats actually really cool tysm for telling me this :>
It's better than that - there are frequent supernova. Get yourself a decent telescope and wait for the next one! You just missed the last one this spring!
@@stevelaw3886 damn wow, i didnt know it was that common
That happened again the 1600s
The best part is they were looking at something that happened 6500 years in their past.
No you’re wrong. the best part is,
CRAAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAAB NEBULA
LOOK LIKE NEBULA, MADE LIKE CRAB
CRAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAB NEBULA
And right now we’re looking at it from 6500 years ago
Probably not, god created everything 6000 years ago.
@@longtong12in48 Cook
@@longtong12in48bro… i cant tell if ur joking or not cause if you arent… idk what to say.
imagine you died and people call your corpse "Crab"
i would like that because crab is delicious
Crabs are cool. And also a delicious boil with that right mix of herbs, oh lawd I need it now 😩.
Crabs are peak evolution. So I would be honoured.
minecraft
I fuckin love crabs.
when i heard “4th of July” my brain played the Moist Critical “WHOOOOOO”
My brain played the “CRAAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAAB NEBULA
LOOK LIKE NEBULA, MADE LIKE CRAB
CRAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAB NEBULA”
@@boahajaisjjakaoajw6453is that a version of crab people?
@@sergio.6137 no, crab people predate the term “version”, so I will fix your sentance for you: you meant to say this;
CRAB PEOPKE CRAB NEBULA LOOK LIKE NEBULA MADE LIKE CRAB CRAB CRAB PEOPLE PEOPLE VERSION CRAB???!? CRAB VERSION PEOPLE NEBULA CRAB CRAB CRAB.
@@sergio.6137 I’m just joking I’m high lol yeah it’s a South Park reference
@@boahajaisjjakaoajw6453 bro wtf you smoking on haha
Man, that was 1000 years ago? Feels like just yesterday…
"Joe get back to bed!"
Ikr, I remember the signing of the declaration of independence like it was last week
bro you underrated af
Thank you!! 🌌
@@evanthorizonlove you and your videos dude
@@evanthorizon CRAAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAAB NEBULA
LOOK LIKE NEBULA, MADE LIKE CRAB
CRAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAB NEBULA
Fun fact: since the Crab Nebula is 6500 light years away, it actually exploded in 5446 BCE. It just took the light 6500 years to reach earth
Now read the poem "(un)To The Star" by Mihai Eminescu.
Fun fact:
CRAAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAAB NEBULA
LOOK LIKE NEBULA, MADE LIKE CRAB
CRAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAB NEBULA
*BC
@@alcarbo8613BCE is actually correct if I am not mistaken.
Here’s a stupid question… if earth is 6500 light years away from an alien civilization with the power to travel faster that the speed of light, would that civilization see dinosaurs when they got here? And would a human on earth given the same technology today be able to travel back in time by just traveling that fast to the spot the earth would be 6500 light years ago?
Ok but imagine the sheer energy to be so bright that the explosion at your death continues for two years before it's over. Hell of a way to go out ngl.
Okay but have you imagined this?
CRAAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAAB NEBULA
LOOK LIKE NEBULA, MADE LIKE CRAB
CRAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAB NEBULA
2years? Um no.. I think you mean 6502 years
20 days*
He said that the star disappeared 20 days after it appeared.
So that means that the explosion lasted 20 days.
@@Anonymous426_20 days during day. 2 years in the night.
So it was 2 years. It was just brightest during the first 20 days.
@@nickeni3050happened for 2 years. the 6500 years is just the time it took for the light to reach earth
This is also where the term Nova comes from. Nova meant new in Latin and the supernova was called a Nova because they thought it was a new star. After they figured out that it wasn't actually a new star, they continued to call the event Novas and Supernovas because of the event.
i sure do love spreading misinformation on the internet
it's crazy how latin languages are really just latin with extra steps because nova means the same thing I portuguese
It’s crazy to imagine something that incomprehensibly big collapsing in on itself and exploding outward for millions of miles in real time.
Interestingly enough, 1054 is also the date of the Great Schism, a tragic event where the communion between the latin and greek churches broke.
Maybe the supernova triggered it 🤔
@@maxinesenior596more something do with religious and political differences between the pope and the patriach
I was thinking the exact same thing when he said the year. 😮
@@Lizzhm Good bet it served as a lot of folks' "sign" to act on the building tensions when they did, though.
There were probably lengthy debates about "what God was telling them" with it for at least the next decade.
"And God said, “Let there be lights in the expanse of the heavens to separate the day from the night. And let them be for signs and for seasons, and for days and years, and let them be lights in the expanse of the heavens to give light upon the earth.” And it was so." -Genesis 1:14-15 (ESV)
There was also a "new star" discovered just under 500 years ago, viewed and recorded by Johannes Kepler's teacher Tycho Brahe. For those who dont know, Kepler is the same kepler as the one who made Kepler's laws of ellipses in math. He made very many discoveries in astronomy, but only because he had Brahe's astronomy notes. Brahe spent most of his life very detailedly recording star and planet movements :)
It’s crazy Brahe managed to record anything since he liked to party all the time with the dwarf he bought
@@bradenr867what
@@bradenr867huh?
@@PokeMageTech oh my god, am I about to introduce you to the Brahe house of fun?
Okay, so he was rich. Like one of the richest people in Italy and rich people like to party, but Brahe like to party more than most, he also liked dwarfs. So tycho Brahe bought a dwarf that followed him around and would entertain him at parties. Actually Brahe died because he held his pee to long at a party that he was hosting, because leaving your guests and going to the bathroom was a sign of disrespect.
the kepler planets are my favorite ones
Seeing this today: Oh a Nebula? That’s cool!
People from that year seeing it: Oh shit we pissed of God!
Considering that the Roman Catholics had just schismed with the Orthodox Church...they may very well have been correct!
@@randomguy1453or at least they would think they were correct
"pissed of"
@@randomguy1453Oh you’re right, I know the date and it didn’t even click in my head :o I don’t know if the supernova became visible before or after the schism but that’s funny to think about
Nahh they saw what the dinosaurs did
Ah yes the supernova of 1054 an absolute classic
WAS THAT THE SUPERNOVA OF 1054!?
How can someone be so smart and yet so jacked
Daaammnnnnn, the way you explain things is soooooo interesting!!! New sub 😁✨️
Thank you!!
i agree i must sub too Also i shall Become a Outer Dimensional level threat to existemce
I guessed it was a super nova imidiatly but I didn't realise the crab nebula is less than a thousand year old (from our perspective)
Depending on how many light years away it is from us, which can tell us how old it is.
Depending on how many light years away it is from us, which can tell us how old it is.
@@tsnoob4669 hence me saying (from our perspective)
Yeah, it's almost 7000 years old
@@c0mete2a37 yes, I am acutely aware of the speed of light, thats why I said "from our perspective"
“And that’s why we celebrate the four of July kids..!”
Imagine tho
Could be possible
Yes, Because of the great and mighty space explosion. Here's this tiny contained explosion to celebrate with.
@TheBauerone55 well I guess it would be the star of the celebration 🧹
Murca' byatch
These videos are so sick, I like em a lot
that’s actually such a beautiful fact fr im happy humanity got to witness such an amazing event
Old News
(Sorry, I can't resist Dad jokes) lol
bruh.mp4
Sorry, I can’t resist this,
CRAAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAAB NEBULA
LOOK LIKE NEBULA, MADE LIKE CRAB
CRAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAB NEBULA
@@liynconreading4476 crab.mpcrab
CRAAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAAB NEBULA
LOOK LIKE NEBULA, MADE LIKE CRAB
CRAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAB NEBULA
Wuuuuttttt is this content? I NEED MORE.
Agreed : )
YES and i am subscribing
It’s science soooo mostly a bunch of guessing
@@RamboOnYaMom?
@@RamboOnYaMomtf you mean guessing? It's all based in evidence and theory. Unlike religion only in theory and not in evidence
Another really interesting star story is the "seven sisters" dreaming of Aboriginal Australia that proves the existence of Aboriginal Peoples long before we thought. The story is based off of a constellation of seven stars, representing the sisters. However, one of the stars disappeared from view about one hundred thousand years ago, proving that Aboriginal Peoples were around to see it and pass it down thousands and thousands of years to the present day. We know that the seventh star is there, but to the naked eye it is invisible and has been for millennia.
Something that’s even more interesting is CRAAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAAB NEBULA
LOOK LIKE NEBULA, MADE LIKE CRAB
CRAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAB NEBULA
@@jakeraught4939 No, they are not. That is racist and disgusting. Neanderthals were a different species entirely, and Aboriginal Australians are as intelligent and capable as any other group of people. Please delete this comment as it is hateful and incorrect.
@@gemmabarkertomkins idk who you were responding too, sounded like they said something rude, but... Factually speaking, Australian Aboriginals are part Neanderthal. As is literally everyone on earth outside of the majority of sub Saharan Africans, though some of them actually have Neanderthal DNA as well. Aboriginal Australians not only have Neanderthal DNA, they even ALSO have Denisovan DNA, another species of early human. Again, outside of Sub Saharan Africans, there are no 100% homo sapiens. I'm sure you were just responding to a derogatory comment, but factually speaking you're wrong. And it's not a bad thing, unless you're 100% sub Saharan African you're also part Neanderthal, and if you're Asian, Polynesian, or Aboriginal Australian you're likely also part Denisovan. Cheers my not fully human buddy! Lol
Btw, very interesting original comment. I'm gonna look into that, stuff like that fascinates me. Doesn't surprise me at all either. I do not believe we have gotten ancient human evolution/history correct whatsoever, and am not surprised at all by your statement. Funny thing is I don't even fully agree with the lines drawn between Homo Sapiens, Neanderthals, and Denisovans being that there is almost as much genetic variance between ancient Homo Sapiens as between them and Neanderthals, as well as the fact that these so called "different species", every one recovered came from the same ancient male lineage as Homo Sapiens. How different could they have been? Especially considering that I myself am obviously a "human", but am part Neanderthal, and how Australian Aboriginals in this case are obviously "human" but are both Neanderthal and Denisovan. It really makes you wonder, what is the real definition of a "human"? Because clearly we haven't defined it perfectly. If only Homo Sapiens are "human" then only sub Saharan African black people, and not even all of them, are pure humans.
Sorry to drag on about it, I just find it super interesting, and since from your original comment I can tell you are interested in human history, as am I, I thought you might like to know about our genetic intermingling with other supposedly "non human" humans, lol
@@HaltDieKlappa Hi! Thank you for your comment, it was very interesting and I love learning things like this. I assumed Aboriginal Australians did not have Neanderthal in them for some reason or another- and yes, the original comment was very rude and I think it referred to Aboriginal Peoples as primitive or something along those lines, saying that they were adjacent to Neanderthals in comparison to non-Aboriginal people.
Personally I don't believe that we are per se "better" than our previous humanoid fellow species/relatives (I have noticed that as a society we seem to enjoy drawing hard lines between things- gender, species, race- so it doesn't surprise me that history isn't as boxed up as we like to think), and I hope that some day we can move past using them as an insult to imply being lesser or less intelligent or worthy of respect, and recognise that we are no more important than any other living thing on the planet just because we label ourselves as smarter.
Thank you for taking time to write your comment, I found it very interesting!
@@gemmabarkertomkins Yeah I figured, lot of racists out there. And I totally agree. In fact since Neanderthals had significantly larger brain cases than modern Homo Sapiens you could argue they were likely even possibly more intelligent. Also the Neanderthals at Shanidar in Iraq to my knowledge are the oldest example of a human species caring for their injured/crippled. Many of the subjects were found with injuries that would have completely prevented them from hunting, gathering, performing any demanding physical roles... yet, all of these near fatal crippling injuries showed signs of healing, years of healing, complete healing, meaning that their tribe/group/family cared for them, despite their inability to contribute to important activities like hunting, the most important activity, since large scale agriculture wouldn't exist until 10s of thousands of years later. I think caring for your sick and old shows civilization, and being that Neanderthals are the oldest examples of this, you could argue they were more advanced in ways. Anyway, thanks again for your comment, human history is really one of the most fascinating subjects if not the most, partially because no matter what, we will never fully know all the details. At least that makes it fascinating to me. There will always be some mystery.
Cataclysmic decimation... Exploded gloriously! Love it! 👍
“WAS THAT THE SUPERNOVA OF 1054?!”
WAS THAT THE NOVA' OF 54'?!?!
Dayum, even heavenly bodies evolve into crabs-
I'm fascinated by how it managed to develop into THAT in a mere millennium. that space dust must be moving fast
The collapse event pulls the matter into the center at close the speed of light, or like ¼, I don't remember the numbers, just insanely fast
And then bounces of the iron core (as nothing fuses beyond iron in a star)
The bouncing of the correct is the supernova and likely also frakking fast
I really hope to see a a safe exposition of light from a supernova in my lifetime
with the naked eye, best guess is betelgeuze.
with binoculors/telescopes it shouldnt be too uncommon to find one though.
@@mauer1 darn… I was hoping the sky might change color from blue to green or we have a green sky at night or something cool I want some visuals👀
@@groot710 nah depending on the size of the dying star it's basically just a tinier sun that may or may not be visible during the day.
SN2023ixf might still be visible right now with a telescope as an example.
As an exploding red giant I can confirm that I am 5 quadrillion light years from your position
There's going to be a Nova this year, T Coronae Borealis. It won't be a *Super* Nova, so it will only be a medium brightness star; about as brigbt as the north star. Still, it's better than nothing!
my favourite channel fr
Love the use of moonlight sonata
Outer wilds has got my youtube algorithm going.
Ah a person of culture I see
I fucking love that game. I really need to go finish the DLC
fr, that game is a fucking masterpiece
Bro ur jacked 💪🏽
Well what’s even more jacked is CRAAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAAB NEBULA
LOOK LIKE NEBULA, MADE LIKE CRAB
CRAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAB NEBULA
I have a question, will we ever be able to see a star be made??
It's not a sudden thing. Happens gradually over thousands and sometimes millions of years. We've imaged just about every stage of this but have not watched the whole event on a single star
@@fdsfds7339 yea, he made a video replying to me, but ty for answering
You can. You just need a strong telescope. It takes countless human lifetimes for a start to be created though, so you can't really witness the whole thing. You can find stars that ar in the process of forming, thouh. Think of a giant cloud getting more and more dense over time until a light starts to emerge in the center of it where slowly a ball of plasma comes to be, sucking in the rest of the cloud, getting bigger and brighter in the process.
/edit: Just realized I kinda wasted my time explaining it lmao. Uh well.
I can answer your question, the answer is CRAAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAAB NEBULA
LOOK LIKE NEBULA, MADE LIKE CRAB
CRAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAB NEBULA
@@cravenstatue5264I made a video as well replying to you, it’s called CRAAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAAB NEBULA
LOOK LIKE NEBULA, MADE LIKE CRAB
CRAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAB NEBULA
I really love this contents
Somebody getting in their July 4 celebrations a little bit early. A bit confused, but he got the spirit of it.
That star is one of the most American stars ever, it made a HUGE explosion on the Fourth of July just because it could
Is the star the most American or is America the most starred? Considering it happened first 🗿
@@Idkmanihatethisthat's why the flag is called the star-spangled banner
That's truly a one in a lifetime event
A good 20 lifetimes even.
I don’t think anything even close has happened since then
I seriously jealous of them for being able to witness such a amazing event
@@1992djgI have something also for you to witness. Here is is: CRAAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAAB NEBULA
LOOK LIKE NEBULA, MADE LIKE CRAB
CRAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAB NEBULA
You know what else is a one in a lifetime event?
CRAAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAAB NEBULA
LOOK LIKE NEBULA, MADE LIKE CRAB
CRAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAB NEBULA
@@boahajaisjjakaoajw6453 nahh
Bro made a new song 💀
Bro, I'm really liking these informations you giving us, thanks for sharing with such passion
I really love the way you just mix all the theories together, that’s science!!!
Eeee I remember learning about this in a book about nebulas, it’s so cool!!!! I love nebulas sm
The fact that it probably died millions of years ago and the light was just reaching earth 1000 years ago is crazy
nah it died 6500 years before cus the nebula in 6500 lightyears away
So you're telling me, a CRAB made this nebula.
You’re almost correct. The truth is actually CRAAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAAB NEBULA
LOOK LIKE NEBULA, MADE LIKE CRAB
CRAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAB NEBULA
Your comment was the closest to reality out of all comments I’ve replied to on this thread, just remember one thing please which is CRAAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAAB NEBULA
LOOK LIKE NEBULA, MADE LIKE CRAB
CRAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAB NEBULA
star evolved to crab because it is the final peak of evolution
@@windows8point1canbreathe MY GOD, ITS...ITS...A CRAB?!
@@ST._Trinas_Torch technically, yes. It's a process called Carcinization.
Watching the universe die in Outer Wilds gives you the same sense of fear.
I always did wonder why all the stars start dying so suddenly around the same time, seemingly out of nowhere
Unstable system
finally a space genre youtuber that can make videos that doesnt give me a crisis
That's the most metal thing I've ever heard. Most of the world saw this star burn brightest for a career if about 2 yrs, but in reality, the star was going out in a blaze of glory. When their career was over, they left behind something new and even more glorious.
I just find it absolutely insane that a star could explode into something that big.
The gas in that nebula has most of its velocity still, so it will keep growing. Eventually some of the gas may crash into another gas cloud which can trigger new star formation 😊
I mean, it is just a very, *very* thin cloud and it doesn't really look like in the photos with human eyes. The actual view you would have if you were floating basically anywhere in outer space would be complete darkness with a few dots of light here and there. (unless when you're close to a sun, then you'd either see one slightly brighter dot of light or you'd be cooked alive within your space suit from the radiaton.
The typical photographies of cosmological objects and formations is usually just a representaions of how space would look like if single gas particles floating in space with inches or even miles in between each one of them would radiate very colorful light. Space isn't really that colorful.
@@groerhahn225 I know what space is like 💀💀
You know what’s even more insane? CRAAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAAB NEBULA
LOOK LIKE NEBULA, MADE LIKE CRAB
CRAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAB NEBULA
@@erickck240no you don’t. I’ll tell you what space is really like. Space is really like CRAAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAAB NEBULA
LOOK LIKE NEBULA, MADE LIKE CRAB
CRAAAB NEBULA CRAAAAB NEBULA
Pretty sure we’d all love to see this in our life time as long as it ain’t our star
God damn it why must everything evolve into crab even the fucking stars are doing it
Dude this is so cool!!! Space is awesome
This guy's informative content is the only thing worth bearing RUclips shorts for.
Wild
Jeez dont tell people what those are... how are we going to endoctrinate people into religion if they understand that what happens in the sky isn't the work of magic?
😂
That's really cool. I knew that astronomy has been going on for thousands of years, but it never occurred to be before how things like nebulae that we observe today would've looked totally different, or have even have been brand new events in cosmic history, to the people observing the sky way back when.
So freaking cool!! I wish I could see it 🥲😭😭🤦🏻♀️
"WAS THAT THE SUPERNOVA OF 1054 AD??"
Fascinating that documentation exists from such various parts of the globe.
I really like your videos man.
Love you science astrology physics videos good stuff man❤❤❤😊
Absolutely love you info! Astronomy is too cool
This is so cool when people documented it 1000 years ago around the globe
I love the fact that the Crab Nebula is only what it looks like after 1000 years. It could look so much different as it comes to be in the same age range as a lot of famous nebulae are now
I love your videos ❤
Chinese and native American astronomers: WAS THAT THE SUPERNOVA OF 1054!?
I wish I had friends that talked about these topics so passionate, I keep it to myself to avoid boring them 😅
Fun fact- decimate means to reduce by a factor of 10. A supernova tends to reduce by complete destruction.
Goddamn, you’re on point with the fax. I love it. Keep up the good work.
I love the facts you give us ! Seriously great job I love watching ur shorts
Live the enthusiasm in your videos. The historic sciences are an awesome vein of information to explore!
Guess they got to see a big firework 💀
Im loving the fact that this channel got recommended to me a day or two ago
So excited for Betelgeuse to blow next!
This guy is the science teacher I always wanted.
an actual intelligent & interesting short video. thanks
I love the "made you look" style of these videos
Wow, such clear (accent) explanation.👍🏼
Nice to hear & understand.. love from India🙏🏼... This short got u a new subscriber😊,🎉
I pray that we'll see something like that in our lifetimes again, that would be so cool
I like this guys videos I find them very interesting.
It's amazing. People from 3 different continents a thousand years ago when North America hadn't been "discovered" yet all had the same experience.
Me who is addicted to game when he say Chinese astronomer find a "star" and call it "Guest Star": GENSHIN
Dude you're awesome, thank you for these videos
I love the crab nebula, you got me sub to the channel
I love what you do man it’s just so brilliant how you can fit all this information one video
I love that I heard this and my brain instantly squeaked "Super Nove!"
Interesting! I'll be thinking about this when Christmas rolls around
Yoooo maybe that’s also what happened in the christmas story too yoooo
How is there no one here YOUR A SINGER
waaaw! Love your info! thanks
Man props to the cameraman for going back 1000 years ago and taking these pics and videos🎉❤❤
Man they were lucky as hell to have seen that. I wish I was around at that time to experience it
"explode gloriously" sounds like part of a plan of Loki's 😂💜
These are the type of convos you have with homies after a J and I am here for it.
New celestial body just dropped
Imagine witnessing something like this on your life time that would be great
I love this. I haven't heard it in a while.
I am fascinated by this event. How incredible it must have been to witness another point of light in the sky that shines nearly as bright as the moon! If it ever happens in my lifetime i will be so hyped lmao.
"Was that the nova of 54?!"