What James Webb Saw Near the Edge of the Universe | James Webb Part 1

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  • Опубликовано: 15 май 2024
  • The journey of James Webb's images, from nebulas in our galaxy, to the youngest galaxies at the edge of the universe. 🌏 Get Exclusive NordVPN deal here ➼ nordvpn.com/astrum It's risk-free with Nord's 30-day money-back guarantee! ✌
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    Image Credits: NASA/ESO/ESA

Комментарии • 3,6 тыс.

  • @FenrizNNN
    @FenrizNNN Год назад +4886

    My favorite part was when the NASA scientists said: It's Webbing time! and then Webbed all over the universe.

    • @tvs5941
      @tvs5941 Год назад +337

      James Webb is one of the most telescopes of all time.

    • @mad_clown475
      @mad_clown475 Год назад +39

      and also madness combat hank said: it's hanking time!

    • @alrighty6898
      @alrighty6898 Год назад +45

      Or when Jack said it’s jacking time and Jack all over the universe

    • @tacticalwookiee7476
      @tacticalwookiee7476 Год назад +80

      Lmao. I don't know why that's so damn funny to me. I think I have dain bramage.

    • @crashcoursezed7947
      @crashcoursezed7947 Год назад +13

      They really slung rope all over the 'verse!

  • @cloudbloom
    @cloudbloom Год назад +4199

    That telescope is a monumental feat of engineering, super impressive work

    • @billmilosz
      @billmilosz Год назад +42

      Mind boggling complexity- and it ALL worked as planned! Apparently the influence of Murphy's Law is attenuated out at the L2 point. 😉😉

    • @amjrpain919
      @amjrpain919 Год назад +10

      With a hole in it already 🙄... Why can't we have nice stuff?!

    • @amjrpain919
      @amjrpain919 Год назад +5

      @@zsbacskai7331 best paint by numbers EVER!

    • @BattleFlanky
      @BattleFlanky Год назад +6

      The cracks are starting to show.

    • @nomoss9600
      @nomoss9600 Год назад

      @@billmilosz I can do it quick, I can do it cheap, or I can do it right. Pick one.

  • @andrewb4470
    @andrewb4470 Год назад +537

    10:00 The illustration of a grain of sand held out at arm's length blocking out hundreds of galaxies in Webb's 'Deep Field' image really brings home the immensity of the universe and how tiny the Earth and our Solar System is!! Thank you for this excellent video!

    • @refrigeratedpc3633
      @refrigeratedpc3633 Год назад +6

      to me its the Blue pale dot

    • @andrewb4470
      @andrewb4470 Год назад +6

      @@refrigeratedpc3633 Yes, that is also a mind-boggling image and shows just how small Earth is in the cosmos.

    • @bizzybizz9862
      @bizzybizz9862 Год назад +3

      That was really mind blowing. A SINGLE grain of sand.

    • @xavierdaume2757
      @xavierdaume2757 Год назад +10

      Aa astronomer once said you could fill an Olympic swimming pool with sand and each grain of sand represented a Galaxy.. then imagine the number of Stars and Planets.

    • @andrewb4470
      @andrewb4470 Год назад +6

      @@xavierdaume2757 Fantastic analogy, thank you! For years astronomers thought there were about 200 billion galaxies in the universe. They now say there are at least 10 times that - 2 trillion galaxies!! Of course there are probably even more than that. Staggering to contemplate!

  • @dannyharris1322
    @dannyharris1322 Год назад +773

    Fun fact: What we call the "universe" isn't even a fraction of what it acutely is, We just know it from what we can see

    • @Ebola-Jones
      @Ebola-Jones Год назад +204

      That's why it's called the observable universe

    • @gogetablue7905
      @gogetablue7905 Год назад +13

      @@Ebola-Jones Yep

    • @seeker4trvth
      @seeker4trvth Год назад +13

      "isn't even a fraction" any proof for that?

    • @Frankje01
      @Frankje01 Год назад +60

      @@seeker4trvth No , it is all estimation and "good guesses" depending how literally you want to take "isn't even fraction"

    • @mmmmmonke7432
      @mmmmmonke7432 Год назад +18

      @@seeker4trvth Proof: The universe is expanding faster than the speed of light.

  • @JohnnyFaber
    @JohnnyFaber Год назад +2549

    The sheer gargantuan scale of the universe is absolutely mind boggling.

    • @mitch_the_-itch
      @mitch_the_-itch Год назад +143

      What is mind boggling is we have no idea what real size of the universe is, lol. We are simply guessing based on many questionable theories. The concept of a "big bang" was intended to be an insult, lol.

    • @sunnyjim1355
      @sunnyjim1355 Год назад +42

      @@mitch_the_-itch Wrong... the TERM 'big bang' was intended to be an insult. Coined by Fred Hoyle who (as an adherent to the 'Steady State' theory of the cosmos) disagreed with the theory of an expanding Universe - the concept of which was not dreamt up to be an insult to Fred Holye/Steady State, as you stated.
      But anyway, he was wrong, so the 'joke' is on him.

    • @gurgleblaster2282
      @gurgleblaster2282 Год назад +20

      @@mitch_the_-itch questionable theories vs Gawd did it. 😳

    • @SSHayden
      @SSHayden Год назад +37

      "Guessing" makes no difference. Even if it has "borders", then it means that our universe is inside some other space.

    • @aluminium5738
      @aluminium5738 Год назад +12

      @@sunnyjim1355 is that not what he said?

  • @obscurity3027
    @obscurity3027 Год назад +1551

    This telescope is truly the pinnacle of human engineering in the 21st century. I can’t wait to see what the next 50 years will bring.

    • @SM2005_
      @SM2005_ Год назад +87

      If we are even here. Lol

    • @keefjunior4061
      @keefjunior4061 Год назад +13

      I think developing the tech for making microchips is closer to our technical pinnacle, although even that is far behind current classified materials development. Up until the wafer fabrication tech, things like rocket engines were also pivotal.

    • @Jim-de4dj
      @Jim-de4dj Год назад +12

      Lucky if I get another five years but they will be amazing that's for sure. Enjoy.

    • @ClaimClam
      @ClaimClam Год назад +2

      Pinnacle? It can barely even see visible light.

    • @bass2762
      @bass2762 Год назад +45

      @@ClaimClam You might as well be using your eyes if you wanted to see visible light in space.

  • @phyllis9750
    @phyllis9750 Год назад +219

    Isn't it awesome and yet amazing to be alive now? So much great science. I am humbled and so thankful.

    • @nextlevelenglish5858
      @nextlevelenglish5858 Год назад +10

      not really, there will only be more and more discoveries. Now we are at a primitive state, we cannot even leave the Earth. Imagine in 100,000 years or 100,000,000 years (if there are any humans still alive).

    • @NightWear21
      @NightWear21 Год назад +12

      extremely humbling. wow. i tried to fathom.. 13.1 BLY away.. , just wow. Those images from Webb... stunning.

    • @James-yf6bd
      @James-yf6bd Год назад +8

      @@nextlevelenglish5858 This is scary but also quite motivating. We are at a stage of human history where planetary wide, (seemingly) instant, transfer of information has only just become the norm. We possess objects in our pockets that can provide for us things our ancestors could never have dreamed of - ordering food by app to be delivered in less than half an hour, listening to any song ever recorded, using it as a torch (!).
      All of these innovations are less than a generation old. Consider what we are a part of in our lifetimes, simply by existing? A time period that will be remembered until, and maybe beyond, the extinction of homo sapiens? This gloomy winter seems more manageable in that perspective.

    • @Jason-k-Jones
      @Jason-k-Jones Год назад

      Nothing

    • @lancerevell5979
      @lancerevell5979 Год назад

      I just hope the next world war doesn't end it and knock us back to the Dark Ages. 🤨

  • @hupkat
    @hupkat Год назад +35

    This is so beautifully done. The section that zoomed out to show the quintet moved me to tears. The awe-inspiring nature of these photos and the fact we are even getting the pleasure of seeing them is truly something. Trying to comprehend the scale and beauty in our universe is something extremely special and videos like this capture it so elegantly. Spectacular.

  • @MisterJoshuaTree
    @MisterJoshuaTree Год назад +925

    The concept of “cosmic noon” is so spiritually evocative to me. The idea that the period of star formation in the universe is already in the downswing, that we live in a “cosmic evening” is so melancholic and beautiful. But it also puts everything into perspectives. By most models the universe is still in its infancy, so you could say that star formation in general is just a brief stage in the ultimately much longer and vastly different lifetime of the universe.

    • @leeshepherd834
      @leeshepherd834 Год назад +38

      @MisterJoshuaTree The death of stars could just be the beginning of cosmic puberty...

    • @smast16
      @smast16 Год назад +53

      Its depressing as all hell. The idea of the big freeze is so sad.

    • @ElegantAmaranth
      @ElegantAmaranth Год назад +4

      Ty for sharing your perspicacity Joshua😎

    • @ElegantAmaranth
      @ElegantAmaranth Год назад +1

      @@leeshepherd834 Thanks for your passive - aggressive specious fatuity anent Joshua's musings😎

    • @MisterJoshuaTree
      @MisterJoshuaTree Год назад +47

      @@ElegantAmaranth bro put away the thesaurus

  • @watchinyoutube8919
    @watchinyoutube8919 Год назад +674

    I shed a tear looking at those photos. How lucky are we? How many men and women who came and passed before us could have only dreamed of this... Incredible

    • @flyingonionring
      @flyingonionring Год назад +26

      Now imagine if we manage to reach there
      (We as the human species)

    • @drbright10
      @drbright10 Год назад +10

      @@flyingonionring tf do you mean “we as in the human species” do you think a dog is reading your comment or something

    • @williingulfditlefsen669
      @williingulfditlefsen669 Год назад +72

      @@drbright10 Pity that you have such a narrow perception. "We as a human species", not as an artificial intelligence, but as living, breathing human beings of flesh, blood and bone, and natural, genetically inherited intelligence. The Dr. doesn't seem to be too bright.

    • @lose8447
      @lose8447 Год назад +5

      Yeah but the universe doesn't actually look like that to us In visible light. Only infrared, so because of that i can't help but feel disappointed 😂

    • @eplclassics9980
      @eplclassics9980 Год назад +9

      We look for answers in space and declare it a miracle. Yet we have not figured out the power of our soul and spirit. The very scientist that tell us about the universe fail to tell us what happens after life. I think the The universe is enough to tell us that we are more than what we think we are. We are created by a maker who holds the universe in his hands. He started time and no man can stop it. We are project in time. One that starts and ends. We need to come to Our savior...His name is Jesus.

  • @kishorechrath3215
    @kishorechrath3215 Год назад +86

    This is the information I was waiting for last fifteen years, mind blowing vdos, it brings me hope that within my lifetime I will be able to know a lot more about the creation. I owe a lot to you especially for this piece of your brilliant description of the vast expanse of universe as seen through the Hubble and James webb
    I will always wait for more such miraculous discovery . Thank you a lot.

    • @ronpritchard6720
      @ronpritchard6720 Год назад +2

      Well Kishorech you could learn a lot about how we and the universe were created in the Holy Bible, telescopes do not have the answers.

  • @TheEmpireBusiness
    @TheEmpireBusiness Год назад +27

    “Now, you might be disappointed by how small it is,” that’s what she said

    • @jamal4381
      @jamal4381 Год назад +1

      someone get this man some likes😂

  • @hana_maru22
    @hana_maru22 Год назад +189

    I can’t say enough how much I appreciate that you don’t sensationalize your videos. It’s simply a beautiful narration of fascinating facts that allows us to fully explore our wonder.

  • @Billybobble1
    @Billybobble1 Год назад +408

    I remember when Hubble launched, the trauma, the heroes, then the jaw-dropping images. 20 years ago little did I realise how long it would take for JWST to actually launch, and little did I realise THIS video series would be the one I was waiting for MOST as the data comes in and unravels itself. Looking forward to the next in this series, thanks Alex.
    I do hope they can get MIRI fully operational again and this sentence ages badly, and quickly.
    It would be amazing if Starship is successful and we can start throwing up more space telescopes, at much more publicly acceptable costs.

    • @Outlaw_j84
      @Outlaw_j84 Год назад

      Are you from the UK?

    • @JusNoBS420
      @JusNoBS420 Год назад +10

      And to think that JWST is basically just warming up. Love seeing how Webb, Hubble, and other star gazing instruments will work together to expand our knowledge on the universe!
      And hears to the next 20 years of space exploration 🥂

    • @shep9231
      @shep9231 Год назад +7

      No doubt bud. I remember the early days of Hubble well. I remember many times when my jaw would hit the ground with some of those early images... yes... those were the days... and now these are the days of James Web.

    • @squillz8310
      @squillz8310 Год назад +6

      @@shep9231 I was born in 2000, around the time Hubble started sending images back to us. I'm so happy to be able to witness the era of the James Webb telescope. Feeling that same excitement seeing these images of our almost inconceivably vast universe. I'm so excited for the future of the imaging of our universe. This stuff makes me so excited.

    • @KenJackson_US
      @KenJackson_US Год назад +3

      But do you remember the extreme disappointment when it was discovered that Hubble's mirror had been ground to the wrong prescription resulting in initially fuzzy images?

  • @DaysofKnight
    @DaysofKnight Год назад +6

    I love the difference in technology between the two. Hubble was peak of technology at the time, and it's lasted us this long. Providing great pictures, and vast amounts of information. Then, we threw JW up there, with modern technology and understandings. The difference is just..beautiful.. It makes my technophile heart cry from joy, appreciation, amazement, and awe. And makes me look forward to what they'll send up in another 40 years from now

  • @brokeneyes6615
    @brokeneyes6615 Год назад +819

    The James Webb telescope is one of those few examples of humanity getting to ”have nice things”.
    Edit: I did not mean this as a negative comment on humanity’s shortcomings.
    Given everything that could go wrong that didn’t because someone on this project made sure it didn’t is why we get to have this amazing telescope.

    • @vince7207
      @vince7207 Год назад

      @Jeff -66 yep... and then morons who can't comprehend any of it just call them all frauds/actors.

    • @mamasnightmare1
      @mamasnightmare1 Год назад +24

      And still there are humans throwing stones at eachother.

    • @spindoctor6385
      @spindoctor6385 Год назад +1

      Just a few examples? I could list 100 almost without trying. It would take days to make a full list.

    • @thecrazyjoe250
      @thecrazyjoe250 Год назад +3

      If you think there's just "few exemples" of this, maybe YOU are just focusing on bad things.

    • @brokeneyes6615
      @brokeneyes6615 Год назад

      @@thecrazyjoe250 I know I haven’t, how about you?

  • @DanielVerberne
    @DanielVerberne Год назад +890

    I don't think most people are aware of or comprehend just how incredible an engineering and scientific achievement that instruments like JWST and Hubble really are. Popular culture isn't particularly clued into subtle scientific issues generally, but I think we could do better as a society in helping to celebrate the true scale of achievement that these instruments represent. It's very hard to equate human achievements and the relatively worth and value of these achievements when they are in distinct fields. I mean, I've often wondered how we would try to 'sell' the magnificence and value to human knowledge that someone like Einstein and relativity represent when compared to say; elite sportspeople like Usain Bolt or Michael Phelps or Tiger Woods, etc. I mean, IS there any common ground we can find to accord some relative or objective value these people and their works provide to humanity? I guess it comes down to what we value as a society and what we are trying to achieve. In that sense, I think there's never going to be a proper objective measure - we're talking about things like entertainment, pride, aspiration to better ourselves and our physical attributes and skills versus more abstract values and properties like the accumulation of knowledge, the enrichment of 'Encyclopedia Galactica', hell perhaps even increasing our chances of surviving cosmic or planetary calamity and spreading this phenomena of life elsewhere.
    TL;DR: I wish more people valued knowledge.

    • @bradandhisbass3008
      @bradandhisbass3008 Год назад +8

      I think Einstein would probably say at this point. Could not that money have been used to help the poor.

    • @mikeellchuk3787
      @mikeellchuk3787 Год назад +10

      increasingly knowledgeable people become increasingly harder to control

    • @chumlee2012
      @chumlee2012 Год назад +3

      @@mikeellchuk3787 its crazy how they do this very nice....now lets take that 10billion dollers and do some good here on our own planet

    • @Ujick46
      @Ujick46 Год назад +18

      @@bradandhisbass3008 i remember mark robber said NASA only got 0,5% of US budget while military and defense got 65%, imagine those 65% alocated to poor people

    • @DroneStrike1776
      @DroneStrike1776 Год назад +1

      Northrop Grumman and Ball Aerospace & Technologies. MURICA!

  • @msmirandagirl
    @msmirandagirl Год назад +21

    Wonderful video as always Alex. Your enthusiasm is palpable and contributes so much to the excellence of your offerings.

  • @mikenobles1038
    @mikenobles1038 Год назад +7

    It truly humbled me to know what a minute spec I am in the universe but can understand how much beauty and power there is out in the universe! Thank for such interesting facts and putting into words to easily understand

  • @ZEROmg13
    @ZEROmg13 Год назад +58

    my heart soars at the future we're creating but i'm a little sad i may not get to experience everything.

    • @advance600
      @advance600 Год назад +13

      Same. I think about all the scientific discoveries and political changes I'll miss. I try to comfort myself by thinking about future generations wishing they were alive during my slice of history. Don't stop dreaming, but remember that our time is just as special, just different.

    • @24Roxyx
      @24Roxyx Год назад +10

      You might reincarnate.

    • @etherraichu
      @etherraichu Год назад +4

      Just keep in mind that everything will seem mundane to the people who live during it. I bet if you told people 1000 years ago what we would experience now they'd react the same.

    • @Lizzybaby30500
      @Lizzybaby30500 Год назад +1

      @zeromgYou will dont worry. Eat healthy and exercise regularly, time and age aren't real. ♡

    • @backalleycqc4790
      @backalleycqc4790 Год назад +1

      I remember when my friends and I used to speculate about NASA landing on the moon, that was it possible.
      Then one day we watched it on television.
      It's quite remarkable how much things change through one's lifetime, we're at the cusp of some remarkable advances, if we don't all die from climate change.

  • @Nightfury17728
    @Nightfury17728 Год назад +297

    I'm still amazed by how powerful Hubble is to this day

    • @invader_jim2837
      @invader_jim2837 Год назад +33

      Indeed. They should keep it operational as long as possible.

    • @AdamMcGrath
      @AdamMcGrath Год назад +13

      Hubble is amazing yes, but just check out those deep field shots from James Webb. And it only took 12.5 hours to get the exposure it needed. Dang! That is one insanely fantastic camera.

    • @joeblogs5012
      @joeblogs5012 Год назад

      Im amazed that people are amazed. 🤣 These things are just toys for the rich and are of no benefit to the wider population. Nobody really cared about space apart from the goons who recieve funding for pretending that there is something out there for "us"

    • @invader_jim2837
      @invader_jim2837 Год назад +3

      @@joeblogs5012 Not only are you wrong, you must be the life of every party.

    • @christianhorner001
      @christianhorner001 Год назад

      We should sell Hubble to the Chinese.

  • @MrSoarman
    @MrSoarman Год назад +8

    I'm sure it is for lack of knowledge, but this give me an eery scary feeling, my goodness I feel sooo small now.

  • @MichaelJamesActually
    @MichaelJamesActually Год назад +216

    Spoiler... There's no images of the edge of the known universe in this video

    • @Benedetttaaa
      @Benedetttaaa Месяц назад +13

      Thanks for saving my 14:56 seconds of time

    • @bazookah5347
      @bazookah5347 Месяц назад +12

      Man, yous a fucking G.
      I owe you 14mins of my life

    • @tayniloalves7089
      @tayniloalves7089 Месяц назад +3

      Thanks

    • @SheiroFul
      @SheiroFul Месяц назад +2

      love bro

    • @joepeter389
      @joepeter389 Месяц назад +6

      The edge of the TV screen is the edge of the universe to some people 😅

  • @Kreygore
    @Kreygore Год назад +249

    One of the best space channels on RUclips in my opinion. Absolutely fascinating and well narrated.

  • @elijahmitchell-hopmeier182
    @elijahmitchell-hopmeier182 Год назад +5

    It’s so cool to see all the NASA scientists shooting Webb. Very epic!

  • @ArtFiendz
    @ArtFiendz Год назад +3

    I'm so excited to see the photos that come back over the next couple decades. truly incredible.

  • @SuperFingerlickinggo
    @SuperFingerlickinggo Год назад +26

    This is so fascinating, and amazing how far humanity has come. it's literally uncomprehendable how big this universe is. we really don't know how old this universe is but it's crazy how much we can see 🤯

  • @darlingicarus
    @darlingicarus Год назад +114

    I really appreciate how you always tell us a statement and then explain how/why we know it e.g. how scientists figured out the little red galaxy is the oldest we've seen so far. it sounds simple but not everyone takes the time to give even a small explanation of the science behind things like that! my understanding of astronomy is very limited so the little explanations that are probably obvious to a lot of people are very much appreciated by me 😂 you're doing fantastic work educating & engaging people with your videos! thank you Astrum!

  • @nickbrown9895
    @nickbrown9895 Год назад +59

    Oh dude, me an my girlfriend have totally fallen in love with your channel since we found you six months back. We've see so many episodes now. We even went to an observatory and saw saturn with our own eyes thanks to you. So keep up the great work, we look forward to seeing many more.

    • @akmed5020
      @akmed5020 Год назад +7

      I found it 6 years ago and I have been hooked.

  • @paulneale988
    @paulneale988 Год назад +1

    What an AWESOME piece of equipment. I am so blown away by the pictures and the narrative behind them.

  • @Donat-xh8pz
    @Donat-xh8pz Год назад +2

    It's amazing to think how much science has improved, the universe is so f-in beautiful and we are soooo small it almost hurts my head.

  • @Toyotajunkie
    @Toyotajunkie Год назад +177

    It definitely makes you wonder how much further/older the universe is. Quite amazing and boggling! I used to say we are a spec of sand, but at this moment I feel like an atom... maybe a proton is next, lol
    Thanks for your time and effort in making these terrific videos!

    • @nu-nisamiracle2401
      @nu-nisamiracle2401 Год назад +8

      Ikr lol.. knowing that we are nothing compared to the universe makes me want to gives more appreciation to things which i'm usually ignore..
      We are soo unbelievable small.. how can we, as mere human being, be soo arrogant and soo self-centered..
      Just how grand is The Creator of all those stars..

    • @skylersimpson4692
      @skylersimpson4692 Год назад +1

      It has nothing to do with time. It’s distance

    • @Toyotajunkie
      @Toyotajunkie Год назад +7

      Negative (Skylar) Nancy Alert! Lol. All of your comments/replies are empty and argumentative... none actually state contradictory facts or are valid retorts.
      Everything has to do with both time and distance.

    • @jiweh
      @jiweh Год назад +4

      ​@@Toyotajunkie ikr we literally measure big distances by lightYEARS

    • @jodyguilbeaux8225
      @jodyguilbeaux8225 Год назад +2

      we have only found a fraction of what is really out there. we are still learning daily about our own planet. for exploration to continue, we need not to cause WW3, so we can continue the search for meaning of the universe and our lives.

  • @michaelteta875
    @michaelteta875 Год назад +9

    The fact that this is only part one excites me to no end

  • @kalen1702
    @kalen1702 Год назад +15

    This video is so well done. The visuals are amazing and it's obvious that you've put a lot of time and effort into conveying complex information into layman's terms. This is my favorite channel right now and I do have to say that your voice is just fantastic for this type of content. Love everything you put out!

  • @Holimajster
    @Holimajster Год назад +4

    For about a year now, i've been watching youtube videos about astronomy almost everyday. I'm going to buy a telescope and hopefully i can learn about astronomy more and more. I was an awful student, even when i tried, the information that was given to me didn't really stick in my head and i always had bad grades. I gave up on school and started working, since physically i'm a very good worker. But if there is one thing in my lifetime i want to learn as much as possible, it's astronomy. This is just amazing! Thanks for the videos Astrum :)

    • @Holimajster
      @Holimajster Год назад

      and if my grammar is incorrect, sorry about that but my english isn't perfect :)

  • @Hoopaball
    @Hoopaball Год назад +9

    Hi! Goodnight everybody.

  • @jppitman1
    @jppitman1 Год назад +16

    One of the attributes I love most in your presentations is the delight and sense of sheer wonder in your voice. That adds immeasurably to your professionally-rendered videos.

  • @SWExplore
    @SWExplore Год назад +1

    Alex, you are simply amazing! We've been watching your videos for a long time and have enjoyed every one of them. Of course we've been subscribed from the first video we watched. Thank you for all of your excellent work!

  • @OBWInspector
    @OBWInspector Год назад +15

    we are so lucky to be born at the beginning of the modern world, we will see the future

  • @muffin6369
    @muffin6369 Год назад

    Glad I found you. The physicists, engineers, pilots etc are my rockstars now. My gosh!

  • @VocalNL
    @VocalNL Год назад +4

    Was waiting for this, thank you for starting this journey with us. To me you are one of best docu makers!
    Keep your formula, it's getting you there!

  • @masterdementer
    @masterdementer Год назад +25

    I can watch Space Webbs images for hours and still not be bored. I have been waiting for it to launch since I was a kid. I first read about it in 2012 in a library book. Back then I had very little understanding of the Universe, so I kept reading more books on it. And with each book I read I became more curious. All those Images of hubble were already beautiful enough. But JSWT made it even more colorful and amazing.

    • @oooilamato
      @oooilamato Год назад

      Me too i want to know if we go up up up in space or down that will be a mystery

  • @dannymarshall6257
    @dannymarshall6257 Год назад +2

    Excellent video, nice detail about something I'm very interested in. Keep up the good work 👏

  • @thomaslamb8635
    @thomaslamb8635 Год назад +11

    What upsets me most is being born at a time when we can just start to perceive the cosmos, but not a time when I can go see it for myself.
    We may never get that far. But seeing those deep field shots, knowing that all those points of light are other galaxies, fills me with a level of wonder I haven’t felt since I was young.
    I wonder how many harbor life.

    • @iloveverycoolcats3833
      @iloveverycoolcats3833 Год назад

      I doubt we’ll go that far tbh 🤷🏾the older generations have already killed our earth and left gen z and newer generations to fix the problem that they cause, and people is still stuck like 2 centuries ago, look at the iranian government forcing women to be islam and would kill any woman for showing 1 cm of hair

    • @willekewk
      @willekewk Год назад

      I just wish i had the chance to experience all of the things that the human race will create and discover.

  • @Rezcuz
    @Rezcuz Год назад +6

    I could watch videos like these for hours, and I'm just about to

  • @judemorales4U
    @judemorales4U Год назад +5

    So beautiful, powerful and mysterious.

  • @rokwan18
    @rokwan18 Год назад

    This is the only channel I need ...glad I found it this is my passion my biggest questions like what is beyond the dark matter

  • @kuppilijayanth9505
    @kuppilijayanth9505 Год назад +3

    3:26 I may seem crazy saying this but if you could try zooming in the webb's image of pillars of creation and you will be able to see (to the left hand side horizontally and at the middle vertically) something resembling the structure of a hand...yeah it may be a coincidence...but just look at it!!

    • @iloveverycoolcats3833
      @iloveverycoolcats3833 Год назад +3

      It’s amazing but we shouldn’t forget that we are made of stardust, We are apart of all of these so it makes so much sense if something resembles us

  • @carpemkarzi
    @carpemkarzi Год назад +16

    Nice. I also loved the Webb pictures of Jupiter and Neptune. The amount of pure science and discoveries waiting is mind boggling. Oh yeah and the picture of an actual Exo planet and atmospheric spectrum of an exo planets…

  • @matulite7515
    @matulite7515 Год назад +52

    I recall an interview with someone from NASA who clarified that the 12.5 hours for the Webb about the deep field image was the total exposure time from two of Webb's instruments observing simultaneously, and so it really took 6.25 hours to create the image. Don't quote me on that - I haven't been able to find anything about this anywhere online, and even NASA's own description of the image on their website only mentions NIRCam. I wish I remembered where exactly I heard it (I swear it was an official interview), but it's possible I'm misremembering something or the person being interviewed was mistaken.

    • @CanIHasThisName
      @CanIHasThisName Год назад +5

      I think that for the time being, it doesn't really matter much. Going from week and a half to less than a day is a massive leap no matter the actual time. Not only does it allow us to see things better, it drastically increases the number of different things we can look at.

  • @amihigh9654
    @amihigh9654 Год назад +2

    I’m doing a project on the james webb telescope for school. These kinds of videos really help and motivate me even more! Thanks

  • @friedpicklezzz
    @friedpicklezzz Год назад +39

    One of humanity’s great achievements

  • @bretthurst5716
    @bretthurst5716 Год назад +33

    I've watched a bunch of JWST videos on RUclips - from professional uploaders to amateurs. Your video has been the most informing and mind blowing video I have seen by far. The zooms and comparisons to Hubble along with the detailed information and diagram has genuinely made me a better, more informed human.

  • @CriticalMonkey623
    @CriticalMonkey623 Год назад +24

    Man I've been anticipating this series since launch day. The view that the JW has already given us of the cosmos is immense, I am thrilled to see what there is to come.

  • @Aditya-pe1xh
    @Aditya-pe1xh Год назад +2

    Wonderful ! Gives a perspective on our lives too, how small are we compared to the vast cosmos.

  • @Davethreshold
    @Davethreshold Год назад

    Thank you! This was wonderful, inspiring, and AWE inspiring!❤

  • @Jimmymc79
    @Jimmymc79 Год назад +12

    Jwst is definitely a marvel of our time and I'm excited to see what it reveals! However the E.L.T. currently under construction in Chile is specifically for the exploration of exo-planets expected to be operational in 2026! Exoplanet exploration just memorizes me the thought of finding life hopefully before my time is up only 43 so hopefully many more years

  • @1234j
    @1234j Год назад +38

    Out of this world, and inspirational! Thank you for your hard work, explanation and efforts. What a gift you have. Cheers from England.

  • @naudalyke
    @naudalyke Год назад +4

    I'm sad I was terrible at science and math in school bc astronomy is so breath taking. That won't stop me from binging on videos like these and continuing to follow our amazing space journeys!

  • @sjennica
    @sjennica Год назад +1

    My capacity for awe does not reach the magnitude of the circumstances we find ourselves in as conscious observers of the universe. Overwhelming.

  • @saukhaven
    @saukhaven Год назад +3

    Great episode. I really love your channel. Thank you for all the work you put into creating them! Cheers!

  • @Nick-A1
    @Nick-A1 Год назад +11

    This is simply breath taking, I feel so humbled and small. I am so hopeful for the next 50 years of scientific progress, what wonders we will someday find. Man this is just incredible.

  • @xanatitan8103
    @xanatitan8103 Год назад

    This, this are the most beautiful images I could ever hope to see in my whole life!

  • @trexxg1436
    @trexxg1436 Год назад +2

    Beautiful images for JWST and looking forward to what it reveals in the future.

  • @ronnie000
    @ronnie000 Год назад +17

    Simply brilliant! I enjoyed every second of this video! wonderfully narrated, expertly put together and perfect in every detail. I am not a stargazer or space fanatic, just someone who wants to say thank you for your efforts. Stay awesome!

  • @rexmundi3108
    @rexmundi3108 Год назад +9

    The simple fact that the farther we look the earlier we see is so profound, mind boggling. Astronomy is the study of the distant past. We are never seeing what is far away, we are seeing what was long ago.

    • @JohnnyAngel8
      @JohnnyAngel8 Год назад

      Agree. See my post above regarding thoughts about the "light-year" terminology.

    • @mrnicktoyou
      @mrnicktoyou Год назад

      We are also seeing what is far away.

    • @JohnnyAngel8
      @JohnnyAngel8 Год назад

      @@mrnicktoyou We are seeing what WAS far away ... and is now farther away.

    • @mrnicktoyou
      @mrnicktoyou Год назад

      @@JohnnyAngel8 it could be now closer.

  • @ganeskmr
    @ganeskmr Год назад

    Fantastic content keep going i waiting for this video thanks

  • @katiac976
    @katiac976 Год назад +59

    imagine if we put all our collective effort and money into building more things like this instead of war and persecution

    • @ken90004
      @ken90004 Год назад +5

      This is part of the Kardashev scale.
      We, as a collective intelligent civilization, need to overcome our political differences. Think about 50K years ago. We colonized. We found power in groups and consumed power. We looked at our neighbors and they had something we wanted. We learned that if we attacked and killed them with rocks, and then missiles, we can take what we need to grow and be more strong. In time we learned that we could instead trade resources instead of killing. And we do this today. We have what is on our shelves, in the stores, from another country, and a another individuals work.
      But we still killed our follow man to take that they have (politics). So our people can expand and survive. The strong still try to kill the weak to take. Or at least control. We are still 50K in our past. The only thing that has changed is the size of the rocks. We have science. We have Carrier groups. We have bombers. We have subs to sneak in. We have huge amount of well train troops that know how to kill. Who has more strong, NATO? Is Russians wrong. Nope. Putin is wrong to try to take from a weaker nation. But this is war games.
      To your point. We all must accept our follow man. And look at them as human. Get over our political differences. If you have then help those that do not. That is the start.
      The solution to this war is simple. Help Russian citizens. Many went to Kazakhstan, Serbia, Turkey, the United Arab Emirates, Georgia, and Finland. Let them know we love them too?

    • @dudeinoakland
      @dudeinoakland Год назад +4

      Sadly, the lust for power is too great for some.

    • @lucasart328
      @lucasart328 Год назад

      In order for thay we need to be hiveminded

    • @jeffsmith3350
      @jeffsmith3350 Год назад

      Maybe if we just took all the money and used it to transition all the little boys to little girls and vice versa, you'd be happy.

    • @Blueknight1960
      @Blueknight1960 Год назад

      @@ken90004 What makes you think our civilization is intelligent? Humans are the only species on earth that wipe out other species. Build weapons of mass destruction that can annihilate entire cities and leave the land uninhabitable. Create viruses that can pretty much kill and wipe out everything. The carnage we do to ourselves. Doesn't sound very intelligent to me.

  • @frankf1095
    @frankf1095 Год назад +21

    Thank you for the very entertaining and informative video. Nice scripting and well presented.

  • @baltogames1501
    @baltogames1501 Год назад +92

    It's amazing how our species has both created and removed the fiction from science. Imagine how advanced society could have become if the motivation had been true benevolence and not simply the vulgarity of profit.

    • @frustratedmillennialz
      @frustratedmillennialz Год назад +10

      One can dream. However, this world is "money over everything."

    • @videoparodyinc
      @videoparodyinc Год назад +4

      I say this all the time!

    • @ThatBoomerDude56
      @ThatBoomerDude56 Год назад +3

      @@frustratedmillennialz Money is just a measuring tape to measure resources.

    • @spmoran4703
      @spmoran4703 Год назад +4

      The need for greed is terrible .

    • @spmoran4703
      @spmoran4703 Год назад +1

      @@frustratedmillennialz I wish you were wrong, but you are not.

  • @samdaou2082
    @samdaou2082 Год назад

    This made my night, beautifully made video. Subscribed

  • @johnstamos4629
    @johnstamos4629 Год назад

    Now THIS was a fantastic James Web video! Great voice too.

  • @davidarmillie4226
    @davidarmillie4226 Год назад +36

    I have been watching your videos for years and this is my favorite one yet! I was blown away by how deeply we can zoom into space! I'm most interested in studying that galaxy that you circled in red. If JWST is able to focus on that for longer than 12.5 hours, I would love to see what that image would be. Great video!

  • @j3nks69
    @j3nks69 Год назад +6

    Thank you SO much for these updates. I genuinely appreciate and love these videos because I have always wanted to pursue a career in the same industry. And seeing the new breakthroughs only fans the fire of my inspiration and drive.

  • @davidconlee2196
    @davidconlee2196 Год назад

    Incredible video! Thank you for making it

  • @ro4eva
    @ro4eva Год назад

    So incredibly beautiful.
    Definitely a humbling experience for me.

  • @witchdoctor6502
    @witchdoctor6502 Год назад +4

    I hope that there will be a picture where Webb will be looking at one spot for several days.

  • @IMAVG
    @IMAVG Год назад +30

    Webb is so precise I think it could actually see John Cena

    • @thesublime7539
      @thesublime7539 Год назад +7

      Nah, not even Webb can achieve that feat

    • @alrighty6898
      @alrighty6898 Год назад +3

      He’s in China you don’t need a telescope to see him

    • @just_me2797
      @just_me2797 Год назад +1

      Or even Drax when he is moving so slow that others cannot see him.

    • @st.peterunner8758
      @st.peterunner8758 Год назад

      R3tard joke

    • @elleni-41
      @elleni-41 Год назад +1

      🤣🤣🖐🖐🖐

  • @Helixal
    @Helixal Год назад +2

    Thank you engineers that worked tirelessly and full of hope on this project.

  • @Linuxdirk
    @Linuxdirk 7 месяцев назад

    The pictures are always so awesome. It always gets mynmind that those things really exist(ed one time).

  • @Aniso442
    @Aniso442 Год назад +75

    God I wish I'd been able to continue my astrophysics degree. This is SO cool! Im such a sucker for space, I cannot WAIT to see what James Webb can do over the next few years. I've started reading the three body problem series and it's really good. I highly recommend it for anyone looking for a good sci-fi series. I'll warn you, though, by the time you finish the series your existential dread will probably be a lot worse. :^)

    • @CrazyLinguiniLegs
      @CrazyLinguiniLegs Год назад

      I, too, love space and astrophysics-it has fascinated me since childhood. I am also just about to start reading the Three Body Problem trilogy. Cheers and -happy- dreadful reading to you!

    • @anuraagsrinivasan3292
      @anuraagsrinivasan3292 Год назад

      M gonna rush to watch it coz of u

    • @Aniso442
      @Aniso442 Год назад +1

      @@CrazyLinguiniLegs I really hope you like it! The reveals are worth it, because the ideas the author presents really sound like they could be true!

    • @Aniso442
      @Aniso442 Год назад

      @@anuraagsrinivasan3292 I'm so desperately hoping the show is gonna be good. :)

    • @tillitsdone
      @tillitsdone Год назад

      You sparked my interest enough that I just ordered the first audiobook. I've been looking for a good sci-fi. Thanks for the recommendation.

  • @tigerboi9694
    @tigerboi9694 Год назад +13

    It truly feels like a privilege to be alive and witness this era

  • @fratercontenduntocculta8161
    @fratercontenduntocculta8161 Год назад +6

    I still think my favorite idea is that our existence proves the universe is attempting to understand itself.

    • @jeffsmith3350
      @jeffsmith3350 Год назад +1

      As long as you don't mention God, you're happy.

  • @williamspindler1603
    @williamspindler1603 Год назад +1

    What a well done video. Really enjoyed it! Thanks!

  • @keithdrew5428
    @keithdrew5428 Год назад +3

    Superb summary of the jwst data so far. Keep us all posted !

  • @BlueJay56
    @BlueJay56 Год назад +22

    This video felt like it had just an extra nudge of production value and care, and thats something I think we all love to see. Please never step backwards and always keep this channel improving, and be happy you're reaching so many aspiring minds!

  • @flynnlivescmd
    @flynnlivescmd Год назад +1

    Absolutely amazing.

  • @subtleartofdisappointment5867
    @subtleartofdisappointment5867 Год назад +1

    Oh. My. God. I've waited for the James Webb and these images since I was 10.

  • @davidgould9431
    @davidgould9431 Год назад +16

    $10 billion might sound like a lot but, considering that it took about 30 years to build and launch, that's about $1 per US citizen per year. I think it's a bargain.
    Edit: beautiful and informative video - thanks!

    • @corbinsmith50
      @corbinsmith50 Год назад

      The United States just gave Ukraine 100 billion for war. That should be illegal.

    • @carlosoliveira-rc2xt
      @carlosoliveira-rc2xt Год назад

      A much better bargain if you add in the millions of illegal aliens.

    • @informalchipmunk5775
      @informalchipmunk5775 Год назад +5

      Imagine how much more money we would have for things like these if all countries put aside their differences and lowered their military budget

    • @rais1953
      @rais1953 Год назад +1

      European citizens too. ESA launched it for them and shepherded it precisely into the correct orbit.

    • @kyoku1982
      @kyoku1982 Год назад +1

      @@informalchipmunk5775 Actually military technology has led to many of the breakthoughs in space exploration.

  • @JonathanCruz-rj2ys
    @JonathanCruz-rj2ys Год назад +4

    I’m so glad I found this channel. Like another commenter said, it doesn’t do too much to sensationalize the science but that gives us room to wonder. Also the narration is informative and relaxing!!

  • @gardenstate78
    @gardenstate78 Год назад

    Breathtaking views and description of our surroundings!

  • @sumsheekirken1549
    @sumsheekirken1549 Год назад +2

    There is no edge...no beginning or end. All is infinitely smaller and infinitely larger...forever, into the past and future and all dimensions. Infinity.

  • @Kevan808
    @Kevan808 Год назад +20

    It would be so amazing if we could travel there in a blink of an eye.

    • @UnchartedWorlds
      @UnchartedWorlds Год назад +5

      if you did, you would probably see just more universe and we our planet Earth would be on the "edge". It's possible that universe is infinite in 3:rd dimension and even though it's infinite it is still expanding, since infinities have always more rooms for more guests.

  • @LegendFromWoW
    @LegendFromWoW Год назад +6

    There are going to be some pretty neat discoveries coming up. I look forward to watching your future videos that highlight them!

  • @g.w.7893
    @g.w.7893 Год назад +3

    13:20 - I think you meant to say “the difference between a YOUNG galaxy like ours and an OLD galaxy that formed just after the Big Bang”.

    • @FlatEarthKiller
      @FlatEarthKiller Год назад +1

      Why do you not call young people new people if you call aging ones old?
      Young and OLD can sometimes mean the same thing. The youngest picture of you, is the oldest picture of you.

    • @dhruvrajput8058
      @dhruvrajput8058 Год назад +1

      As our galaxy is only thousand of light years in diameter we are able to see the parts of our galaxy what they looked like thousands of years ago... but in case of distant galaxies which are billions of light years years away we are able to see how they looked like billions of years ago just after the big bang, as light takes billions of years to travel from these galaxies

  • @antwhite684
    @antwhite684 Год назад

    Its amazing were so close to seeing the edge of space. Or even beyond. I hope I get to see it in my lifetime.

  • @skybluespace22
    @skybluespace22 Год назад +8

    That was awesome Alex. Thank you. And thank you and your brother for all your hard work.

  • @R.H.S.U
    @R.H.S.U Год назад +3

    Loved the animations of the universe and how you peered us farther in time and in order, great video :D

  • @xeiAiex
    @xeiAiex Год назад

    Amazing content. Amazing presentation.

  • @an0malyops59
    @an0malyops59 Год назад

    10:33 this deep field bend really helps me understand how light travels through the universe and how wormholes work.