I'm so glad that stupidity isn't contagious. It's a fucking AI generated video! And I can't wait for RUclips to catch on and allow a mechanism to block the crap. But while there's dumbness I guess they won't give a shit
Well, too bad that we are not descended from an ancient species of advanced biped that sprinkled stargates around the universe for future descendants to travel to other habitable worlds through co-opted worm holes, thus giving us a truly vast space to study within and beyond our own galaxy using widely separated telescopes to detect the larger structure of our universe and its detailed phenomena with greater accuracy. On the other hand, we are perhaps fortunate that such shortcuts between remote galactic and extra galactic civilizations are virtually impossible. Our challenges to advance our common knowledge must be solved from here, as long as our solar system remains stable enough for us to make sense of it all long before our sun begins to die.
People have been predicting the imminent demise every several days for many years. If you keep predicting it for the next several centuries, you will eventually be right.
What makes observers expect it somewhere soon is because we can already observe some of the erratic and unstable behavior that indicate a coming supernova.
Yep, it's been going since 2009 apparently, because some news reporter misread an astronomical publication and flew into a panic. Nothing more than fearmongering sensationalism ever since. What's next? "Shock as End of the Universe coming!" and right at the end of the multi-page article of agenda-filled rubbish, it'll finish with '...in several trillion years.'
It’s six or seven hundred light years away, so if you want to SEE it going supernova, you need Betelgeuse to have gone supernova sometime around when Chaucer was writing the Canterbury tales!
I love this marathon format! The way the information is presented is so easy to understand and in particular, the newest updated information on the phenomenon makes me the smartest guy at the break table (we have a lot of so-called astronomers at work here 😆!) I've seen some of your other videos but the varied information seems more interesting to me - Subbed!
There was a recent hypothesis that Betelgeuse had in fact swallowed its companion star and that this event was responsible for the strange pulsations observed. I wonder if this hypothesis is still considered likely or has it been discounted already?
In the beginning of the video they talk about it colliding with another star. They also talk about scientist the pieces together, meaning that hypothesis is very much apart of the overall puzzle. So yeah, I believe it is...
I'd already known for a while that Bettelguese might explode in my lifetime. But, hadn't heard of T Corona Borealis' 80 year window until now. So many new videos from this, so little time.
It would be really amazing and cool while also being sad if Betelgeuse were to pop while we're alive to see it. We should be far enough away to be spared any significant inconvenience and it would be amazing to witness something like this with your own eyes, but Orion would be no more. At least as we know it.
Please explain how you combine these two sentences: 7:40 -> the closest a star has likely come to the sun was about 500 astronomical units, roughly 10 times the distance from the Sun to Pluto such Close Encounters are rare, occurring once every few hundred thousand years 7:50 -> even rarer are encounters within 1,500 astronomical units, which happen roughly once every billion years There must have been several misplaced zeroes or some other kind of confusion. The first sentence implies that there are approaches between 500 and 1000 AU from the Sun a few times every Million years. In contrast, the second implies that over the 4.5 billion years the Earth exists only circa 5 approaches have happened within the much bigger volume of a 1500 AU radius
Very cool video and extremely interesting. I loved it and I'm looking forward to much more of your content. Even though some of the information in this production was incorrect, it was still easy to watch and excited my mind in it's understanding of the cosmos! It, also, gave me many more targets to explore, with my telescopes, right here in our own galaxy!!! Thank you. Sincerely, Rich Williams Astor, Florida 32102 USA!
Tunguska: It was a rubble pile asteroid. It was not of the metallic variety, but carbonaceous. It would have burned up really hot in the atmosphere, as they are very brittle and highly reactive with oxygen as they heat up. Basically, that 10 MT kerboom was a massive MOAB made of the equivalent of a very loosely packed pile of charcoal briquettes with a 5,500 degree torch on them, almost all at once, and all the oxygen they wanted. Also of note is the carbonaceous asteroids also have plenty of complex hydrocarbons on them, sometimes a lot of methane. That whole thing would have turned into a gas and nothing would have hit the ground but the detonation. That's why the pattern in the trees and no crater.
@@joefish6091 I bet a lot of carbon dioxide came down with it. Water vapor, and anything else that gassed out. It would be really cool if we could convince a small carbonaceous asteroid into a stable-enough lunar orbit so it could be studied at will! But those lunar mascons won't let that happen!
Stellar events march along on such a long timeline that even if it's "just about" to explode that could mean another 10000 years,,so let's not all get too excited about it just yet.
Your are miss-leading people if you are implying it is gonna blow tommorow. It probably won't blow in the next million years. Stars go through stages of life, on the order of billions of years.
It's estimated to blow anytime between now and 100k years. It may have already gone nova and we won't know for 600 years from now. We've never studied a star before nova and after. We really dont have a grasp on a telltale sign of impending explosion. Will be interesting to watch!
Yeah, no bloody clue. NEVER MIND that the video offers possible solutions. YOUR problem, sirrah, is that you think that because Science doesn't know EVERYTHING, it knows nothing. NEVER MIND that the entire idea of science is to push back the frontiers of ignorance. That you don't know this makes me think you took no science classes, ever. SNORT.
So now Nibiru/Planet-X and the flood stories from all cultures around the entire world make a whole lot of sense. Think people should take heed of ancient warnings more seriously. Maybe even as it was pulling something with it that was even closer to us, came through our solar system and perhaps destroyed a planet? Maybe the asteroid belt isn't from something that didn't form, but from something that was destroyed.
@williamwolf2844 so you're saying dwarf stars can't pull planet sized objects with it, which might pass through our solar system? 'cause that's exactly what the video suggests could happen. Rouge planets don't even require a star to be dragging it somewhere.
A much shorter time of light transmission is why the visual differences are so interesting. The Rhiemmian nested manifolds in the universe is a theory that warrants investigation. If true, light from stars gets to the visible here on earth is a very short amount of time. Yet still is very acceprable contrary to the straight line calculations that exaggerate the speed of light theory.
Witnessing supernova is really fascinating, but at the same time wishing for star to explode well... Imagine someone far away waiting for our sun to explode just to witness event in the sky.
My grt grt grt grt etc grandpa wrote that Beetlejuice exploded when he was a kid but didn't know anything about it as he was asleep at the time. But he left a note saying, "one o you guys might actually see it"
Look the speculation about whether it’s going to blow in our lifetime may be warranted or not, but I guarantee you this any reasonable supposition based on any scientific evidence that comes close to predicting it in the lifetime of that scientist will make that scientist hell of famous. So it’s worth making the effort if you want eternal fame.
There was a movie, a movie of the past. "When Worlds Collide", about a rogue star Belas and planet Zyra in orbit and how the Earth was shaken, stirred and obliterated. And all of the world were focused on leaving Earth in time before annihilation. I would get people to see this Sci-fi classic. And try to explain the hypothesis. Was difficult, so rare a possibility. Or is it???
The marathon format is OK (whatever pleases the RUclips algo. gods of course must rule), but you need to put in more pauses to let the information digest and have a better chance of crossing over to long-term memory. Both between the unrelated segments, and within segments, there should ideally be more pausing between sentences (though I realize modern short attention spans drive creators towards the barrage-of-info style).
If you show a clock on the screen to see the end of Betelgeuse , people will wait for a while watching the clock. They said "any time soon" 😂 and I got sucked into it like a child 😂😂Even knowing that the light takes thousands of years to reach the Earth and the Star may no longer be there.
Thank you for sharing this perspective/analysis of your findings. Seems Inflation and/or respirations of the universe lead to an observation of a kind of life/livingness difficult to understand…beyond our understanding. Something beyond/other than our understanding leaves the open to…
Perhaps one of these primordial black holes passed through us a few decades ago, causing parts of two parallel universes to merge and thus creating the Mandela Effect?
Jwst can see a little further then us. If it does go, jwst will see it happen then they will release videos of it. Then we will wait 600 years for the light to reach us!
We will never be able to know exactly how long ago Beetlejuice actually went supernova. The only thing that we will know is that as soon as we see that light disappear here from our vantage point that it happens somewhere between 635 and 655 years ago. That is the best we will ever get.
so far nobody has come close to making a prediction about any star doing anything, not even our own sun. But if Betelgeuse goes supernova in our lifetime, those who predicted it might know what they're talking about :D
Did you also know that it's moment in time regardless of its distance away from us is exactly the same? Example, when it finally gives out, it won't take us X amount of years to see that it's finally gone...... The very moment it's not there anymore,,,, is exactly that. Regardless of distance.
Something I've never understood.They talk about light-years and distance.refering to passage of time from us,as if all that is relatively the same.With Hubbell and James Webb telescopes, shouldn't we be able to see something that close in all most real time?
@bruceweaver9514 it's the result of people getting bored and trying to make science of things that don't require science made of them. An object there, to an object here, no matter the distance or what it's doing is AS IT IS,,,,, in the same moment in time......
It probably has a brown dwarf circling it and that's why we can't really see it. Or it could be something we can't explain, which is probably the case.
This was all okay, EXCEPT for the segment about micro black holes, where totally random ideas where tossed around wildly. There is NO reason to think they would be on particular orbits or travel at particular speeds.
love this..... thank you so much... would love to see more of this nature....💛💛💛💙💙
I’ll bet you don’t
I'm so glad that stupidity isn't contagious. It's a fucking AI generated video! And I can't wait for RUclips to catch on and allow a mechanism to block the crap. But while there's dumbness I guess they won't give a shit
GOOD LUCK!!!
@PaNDaSNiP3R 😂😂😂 no you guys!!! The content making... not Supernovae
Well, too bad that we are not descended from an ancient species of advanced biped that sprinkled stargates around the universe for future descendants to travel to other habitable worlds through co-opted worm holes, thus giving us a truly vast space to study within and beyond our own galaxy using widely separated telescopes to detect the larger structure of our universe and its detailed phenomena with greater accuracy. On the other hand, we are perhaps fortunate that such shortcuts between remote galactic and extra galactic civilizations are virtually impossible. Our challenges to advance our common knowledge must be solved from here, as long as our solar system remains stable enough for us to make sense of it all long before our sun begins to die.
People have been predicting the imminent demise every several days for many years.
If you keep predicting it for the next several centuries, you will eventually be right.
It probably already happened. Your puny lifespan and inability to focus on a cosmic scale explains much.
What makes observers expect it somewhere soon is because we can already observe some of the erratic and unstable behavior that indicate a coming supernova.
@@staomruel assuming that the behaviour we are 'observing' in this case is in fact a pre-cursor of a supernova.
The (infitely) time-tested monkies and typewriters method
Yep, it's been going since 2009 apparently, because some news reporter misread an astronomical publication and flew into a panic.
Nothing more than fearmongering sensationalism ever since.
What's next? "Shock as End of the Universe coming!" and right at the end of the multi-page article of agenda-filled rubbish, it'll finish with '...in several trillion years.'
I’m making it my lifes mission to remain alive until Betelgeuse goes super nova!!
It just did 3 minutes ago
It’s six or seven hundred light years away, so if you want to SEE it going supernova, you need Betelgeuse to have gone supernova sometime around when Chaucer was writing the Canterbury tales!
Stay away from Serge. 😅
@@K1lostream
Really? That's cool.
You better stock up on the E45 then. You will have some serious skin problems when you reach 10 million years old.
If there's one stellar event i want to see in my lifetime, it's the effects of Betelgeuse going supernova
Really should have called the companion star Lydia.
yes! By phone ... you would have to wait 1200 years for an answer.
They still have a chance! It's only been informally dubbed "Betelbuddy"
Phil, 10/10 comment 🏆
Loved this and yes I hope U will and as you dothe videosyou can show how 1 concept relates to another like this video ! Most Excellent....❤
my bucket list:
1. miss a supernova
I mean, that's a pretty rad way to kick the bucket.
@@SpeakerWiggin49ikr, I mean, none of us are getting out alive, might as well go in some instant spectacular way!
About to happen....600yrs ago.
They can't even get the language right 😂😂😂
Well, 400 to 600 ly away, they can't tell accurately any more, due to the new knowledge we have about the universe...
It probably already happened ... Now what?
It already happened 600 years years ago.
It happened and it's on its way. Get it?@davidvaughn7752
Thank you, from a first time viewer and new subscriber. I'm glad the algorithm sent you my way!
Thanks!
I love this marathon format! The way the information is presented is so easy to understand and in particular, the newest updated information on the phenomenon makes me the smartest guy at the break table (we have a lot of so-called astronomers at work here 😆!) I've seen some of your other videos but the varied information seems more interesting to me - Subbed!
There was a recent hypothesis that Betelgeuse had in fact swallowed its companion star and that this event was responsible for the strange pulsations observed. I wonder if this hypothesis is still considered likely or has it been discounted already?
In the beginning of the video they talk about it colliding with another star.
They also talk about scientist the pieces together, meaning that hypothesis is very much apart of the overall puzzle. So yeah, I believe it is...
Both are possible, that might have started as a trinary system and is now a binary system.
A human narrator! Thumbs up for this alone. Still the correct name ist "Beteigeuze" and I have no idea how to pronounce that.
I'd already known for a while that Bettelguese might explode in my lifetime. But, hadn't heard of T Corona Borealis' 80 year window until now. So many new videos from this, so little time.
It would be really amazing and cool while also being sad if Betelgeuse were to pop while we're alive to see it. We should be far enough away to be spared any significant inconvenience and it would be amazing to witness something like this with your own eyes, but Orion would be no more. At least as we know it.
Great video. This is the first time I’ve heard of the possibility of Beetle Buddy.
If you listen to possibilities talk to Neils Bohr and Werner Heisenberg: WARNING - both are dead.
The rapid rotation may indicate the Beetlejuice will become a neutron star.
Please explain how you combine these two sentences:
7:40 -> the closest a star has likely come to the sun was about 500 astronomical units, roughly 10 times the distance from the Sun to Pluto such Close Encounters are rare, occurring once every few hundred thousand years
7:50 -> even rarer are encounters within 1,500 astronomical units, which happen roughly once every billion years
There must have been several misplaced zeroes or some other kind of confusion. The first sentence implies that there are approaches between 500 and 1000 AU from the Sun a few times every Million years. In contrast, the second implies that over the 4.5 billion years the Earth exists only circa 5 approaches have happened within the much bigger volume of a 1500 AU radius
🤔 I was about to point out the exact same thing 😂😂
You think this was proof-read by anyone before posting?
@@spikespa5208 Clearly not! 😃
nope@@spikespa5208
I thought I must have misunderstood the narrative.
BEST compilation I've watched in a long long time. Enjoyed V much. Thank you!!!
Fascinating! This is what I like to see from a programme. Thank you so much. Are there more like it?
That was a feast of great, hard science and all news to me. Job done. I'd like more please! Thanks for taking the time.
Very cool video and extremely interesting. I loved it and I'm looking forward to much more of your content. Even though some of the information in this production was incorrect, it was still easy to watch and excited my mind in it's understanding of the cosmos! It, also, gave me many more targets to explore, with my telescopes, right here in our own galaxy!!!
Thank you.
Sincerely, Rich Williams
Astor, Florida 32102 USA!
I enjoyed every minute of this content. Liked and subscribed. I would love to see more like this.
Tunguska: It was a rubble pile asteroid. It was not of the metallic variety, but carbonaceous. It would have burned up really hot in the atmosphere, as they are very brittle and highly reactive with oxygen as they heat up. Basically, that 10 MT kerboom was a massive MOAB made of the equivalent of a very loosely packed pile of charcoal briquettes with a 5,500 degree torch on them, almost all at once, and all the oxygen they wanted. Also of note is the carbonaceous asteroids also have plenty of complex hydrocarbons on them, sometimes a lot of methane. That whole thing would have turned into a gas and nothing would have hit the ground but the detonation. That's why the pattern in the trees and no crater.
Also the 1947 Sikhote-Alin meteorite, 90 tons traveling at 14 km/s (8.7 mi/s), 90 tons hit the atmosphere, 23 tons impacted the Earth.
@@joefish6091 I bet a lot of carbon dioxide came down with it. Water vapor, and anything else that gassed out. It would be really cool if we could convince a small carbonaceous asteroid into a stable-enough lunar orbit so it could be studied at will! But those lunar mascons won't let that happen!
Stellar events march along on such a long timeline that even if it's "just about" to explode that could mean another 10000 years,,so let's not all get too excited about it just yet.
Or hundreds of years ago …
Very nice, only Voyager was launched in 1977 not 1971😮
This video has a bunch of incorrect information. I’ll stick with channels like scishow or spacetime or Neil’s podcast.
There is little greater than human imagination. It's the foundation of our creativity.
6:34 was not expecting that. Thanks for the laugh XD
Best video representational graphics I've ever seen. Omg. Yes please more.
PLLLLEEEEAAAAASSSSSEEEEE KEEP DOING THIS!!!
Wow. Can't wait for my great great grandkids to watch this epic event.
Please make more of these videos!😊
Loved it , Kept thinking over now then another great piece over & over ! not too long ( 3 hrs) , just right ! .more .
Your are miss-leading people if you are implying it is gonna blow tommorow. It probably won't blow in the next million years. Stars go through stages of life, on the order of billions of years.
Its estimated to blow in about 100,000 years
It's estimated to blow anytime between now and 100k years. It may have already gone nova and we won't know for 600 years from now. We've never studied a star before nova and after. We really dont have a grasp on a telltale sign of impending explosion. Will be interesting to watch!
@@brady657the neutrons will get here before the light giving us a little bit of a heads up.
Small stars live billions of years. Very massive stars live closer to 10 million years.
I don't think it's anymore likely to blow in 1M years than it is tomorrow.
I am liking this channel. I am glad it appeared in my feed.
All good stuff. I enjoyed the marathon!
Awesome! Very enjoyable :)
It seems interesting that at ultra tiny scales there's lots of empty space, and at ultra large scales, theres lots of empty space.
Well done, thank you
I enjoyed the marathon format.
“Challenges our understanding of stellar physics”. In other words we haven’t a bloody clue 🤪.
We have knowledge, but not near enough to know what happens exactly. 3 Body problem
Yeah, no bloody clue. NEVER MIND that the video offers possible solutions. YOUR problem, sirrah, is that you think that because Science doesn't know EVERYTHING, it knows nothing. NEVER MIND that the entire idea of science is to push back the frontiers of ignorance. That you don't know this makes me think you took no science classes, ever. SNORT.
So now Nibiru/Planet-X and the flood stories from all cultures around the entire world make a whole lot of sense. Think people should take heed of ancient warnings more seriously. Maybe even as it was pulling something with it that was even closer to us, came through our solar system and perhaps destroyed a planet? Maybe the asteroid belt isn't from something that didn't form, but from something that was destroyed.
You have absolutely no idea what you're talking about.
@williamwolf2844 so you're saying dwarf stars can't pull planet sized objects with it, which might pass through our solar system? 'cause that's exactly what the video suggests could happen. Rouge planets don't even require a star to be dragging it somewhere.
A much shorter time of light transmission is why the visual differences are so interesting.
The Rhiemmian nested manifolds in the universe is a theory that warrants investigation.
If true, light from stars gets to the visible here on earth is a very short amount of time. Yet still is very acceprable contrary to the straight line calculations that exaggerate the speed of light theory.
I seen this in SG1 using a StarGate to transfer the material from a star to a blackhole
Witnessing supernova is really fascinating, but at the same time wishing for star to explode well... Imagine someone far away waiting for our sun to explode just to witness event in the sky.
Well done!!
My grt grt grt grt etc grandpa wrote that Beetlejuice exploded when he was a kid but didn't know anything about it as he was asleep at the time. But he left a note saying, "one o you guys might actually see it"
Look the speculation about whether it’s going to blow in our lifetime may be warranted or not, but I guarantee you this any reasonable supposition based on any scientific evidence that comes close to predicting it in the lifetime of that scientist will make that scientist hell of famous. So it’s worth making the effort if you want eternal fame.
It has probably already happened, but the sheer distance from the star keeps it from showing up earlier.
Voyager 1 was launched in 1977.
Indignant Tyrannosaurus is the funniest thing I have seen all year.
Ill be here after it blows up, so there .
So if it occurs sometime in 2025 we will realize that it actually started in 1375. We are always late to the party.
I like the t--rex sarcasm, hmmm a stable place
The 1987 supernova almost went unnoticed because everyone had been focused on Betelgeuse's imminent explosion.
DUDE, BETELGEUSE IS GOING SUPERNOVA IN 100,000 YEARS!!!
Haha, everyone needs a Betel-buddy!
This will go on for another 2,000 years
I demand MORE MARATHONS!!! (please.)
Would be amazing to witness
In 500 years
500 years.... or tomorrow. Would still be amazing to witness.
That would in fact explain the presence of Nibiru, still in our solar system but on a very excentric orbit..
Only 10,000 more years to wait!
There was a movie, a movie of the past. "When Worlds Collide", about a rogue star Belas and planet Zyra in orbit and how the Earth was shaken, stirred and obliterated. And all of the world were focused on leaving Earth in time before annihilation. I would get people to see this Sci-fi classic. And try to explain the hypothesis. Was difficult, so rare a possibility. Or is it???
Countdown to Betelgeuse Supernova began with the Big Bang, so... yeah.
The marathon format is OK (whatever pleases the RUclips algo. gods of course must rule), but you need to put in more pauses to let the information digest and have a better chance of crossing over to long-term memory. Both between the unrelated segments, and within segments, there should ideally be more pausing between sentences (though I realize modern short attention spans drive creators towards the barrage-of-info style).
If you show a clock on the screen to see the end of Betelgeuse , people will wait for a while watching the clock. They said "any time soon" 😂 and I got sucked into it like a child 😂😂Even knowing that the light takes thousands of years to reach the Earth and the Star may no longer be there.
Missed chance to name the second star Lydia. "We've come for your galaxy Chuck!"
I’m going to tell my granddaughter to keep an eye out for it hahahaha!
I like Betelgeuse but Rigel is the Alpha in this Constellation, not Betelgeuse🤣
Thank you for sharing this perspective/analysis of your findings. Seems Inflation and/or respirations of the universe lead to an observation of a kind of life/livingness difficult to understand…beyond our understanding. Something beyond/other than our understanding leaves the open to…
9:27 - The Voyager 1 probe was launched in 1977 NOT 1971.
Perhaps one of these primordial black holes passed through us a few decades ago, causing parts of two parallel universes to merge and thus creating the Mandela Effect?
Loved it
650 light years away if it blew up today 650 years From now, it will be seen on earth
@@markjgaletti57 Hopefully it blew up 649 years, 51 weeks and 6 days ago
Yes. A+
Amin @@WarrenPeace007
@@WarrenPeace007 This can be, according to it´s pulsation rate.
Jwst can see a little further then us. If it does go, jwst will see it happen then they will release videos of it. Then we will wait 600 years for the light to reach us!
Correction: the fast spin is wrong due it being the plasma bubbles moving violently.
Just wanted to point out that Voyager 1 was launch on September 5th, 1977. Not sure where you got 1971.
this is the length of program i prefer
We will never be able to know exactly how long ago Beetlejuice actually went supernova. The only thing that we will know is that as soon as we see that light disappear here from our vantage point that it happens somewhere between 635 and 655 years ago. That is the best we will ever get.
Fun fact, if Beetlejuice goes supernova, the light once it reaches earth will be as bright as a full moon for about a decade
I'm waiting for the save the Beateljuice group!!
Same members as in the _Reunite Gondwanaland_ group.
so far nobody has come close to making a prediction about any star doing anything, not even our own sun.
But if Betelgeuse goes supernova in our lifetime, those who predicted it might know what they're talking about :D
I predict that our star, the sun, will rise in the east tomorrow and set in the west.👍
@@nicolasolton good one but that's just the earth spinning. Not the star doing something :D
Malarkey. Our Sun's future is well understood, based on its age, size and composition. You must have NO knowledge about astrophysics. Amirite?
I would think they would know when Betelgeuse is fusing Si into Fe, and that starts a 500 years, and that starts a 500 year countdown.
Fantastic ❤
They have been predicting this for decades, we are comparing the human time scale to universal time scale.
Shoulda named betel buddy "Lydia."
Did you also know that it's moment in time regardless of its distance away from us is exactly the same?
Example, when it finally gives out, it won't take us X amount of years to see that it's finally gone......
The very moment it's not there anymore,,,, is exactly that. Regardless of distance.
Something I've never understood.They talk about light-years and distance.refering to passage of time from us,as if all that is relatively the same.With Hubbell and James Webb telescopes, shouldn't we be able to see something that close in all most real time?
@bruceweaver9514 it's the result of people getting bored and trying to make science of things that don't require science made of them.
An object there, to an object here, no matter the distance or what it's doing is AS IT IS,,,,, in the same moment in time......
No one talks about the magnetic instabilities with huge bloated red super giants which may spark off the supernova.
Stop asking what do I thin! 😂 I’m totally beefuddled 😂😅
Great exposition. I'd like to learn more.
love it!
There seems to be a light year difference between what I say and what I do.
this was great
Nice!
It probably has a brown dwarf circling it and that's why we can't really see it.
Or it could be something we can't explain, which is probably the case.
I would love to see the wavefront as it reaches our area.
So I'll leave a note for my great great great great great grandchildren to keep their eyes open!😂
That means life ended millions of years ago and the alternative universe is about to catch up to us and start the timeline over again.
They been saying this for two years now lol
I’m ready for it to happen, I wanna see how people react to two straight years of daylight
Whenever it happens it will be cloudy and overcast here on the east coast of the USA…
This was all okay, EXCEPT for the segment about micro black holes, where totally random ideas where tossed around wildly. There is NO reason to think they would be on particular orbits or travel at particular speeds.
I like “it may have started” haha spoiler it’s over! We are just waiting for the message. Dam light is so slow these days hahahaha!