I always love the deep sky series, but this one in particular was amazing! I liked being taught about the science, but also getting a peek into how the research itself was performed!!
That‘s the beauty of your videos: Listening carefully, being serious about the science, but every once in a while asking a personal question. And there you can see the fascination they still feel about it in their eyes and faces. For me I got a glimpse of that when I pointed my camera with the 300 telelense on my mighty StarAdventurer star tracker at M 87 in the virgo cluster. And after stacking 50 pictures, out came dozens of galaxies around this beautiful elliptic galaxy, in every single corner of the picture! It‘s a perfect beginners target, and I loved it 🤩!
Always love to see one of these featuring Dr. Gray; she so clearly loves what she does, and her enthusiasm causes the viewer to get pulled in a little further than would have been the case otherwise. Thank you, Brady and Meghan.
what humbles me is how much time, effort, dedication and care goes into even the smallest bit of science that we get to hear about. Ten yeas of ones life studying this single image, its every nooks and carnies, every distortion, smudge and blob. That, my friends, is what it takes to do science.
Dr Meghan Gray is so awesome,really love her videos.That's just one patch of sky with so many galaxies and stars.....mind blowing stuff ! I'm so glad there are people like her dedicating their lives to solving just a piece of the overall puzzle of the universe. Just amazing !
One of the most outstanding series of videos I've ever watched regarding astronomy & astophysics...whenever I point my telescope & camera combo to do some electronic assisted astronomy, I first search on DeepSkyVideos library to see if anything relative to my target is uploaded...trully gives a super boost to my observing sessions! Love u all guys... we need MORE of such GREAT videos!!!
It is always such a distinct pleasure to watch Dr. Gray narrate one of these videos. Her way of explaining what she is viewing is absolutely clear and distinct. Thanks you.
When she's talking about the one galaxy cluster behind another, it's so weird to realise that the more distant cluster as seen in the photograph is possibly thousands of years further back in the time than the cluster right in front of it. One picture of two things, and the picture is seeing one of them thousands of years further in the past than the other. It makes me feel weird. Also the way she says "flocculent" is awesome.
It'll be a heck of a lot more than mere thousands of light years further back, I can tell you that much. The Andromeda Galaxy is over 2.5 _million_ light years away, and that our closest neighbour!
marzcorp Yeah, I guess I didn't really think that part through. Even though I know The Milky Way is ~100,000 light years in diameter. Thanks for the correction.
Well, down at the Creation Museum they don't believe the light we are seeing from those galaxies is really billions of years old. They go with the mere thousands of years as in your first estimate.
10,000 Galaxies in one Glance Dr Meghan Gray on a long-term project to intensely study a small postage stamp of sky!!! More about STAGES: bit.ly/STAGES_space
Just discovered this series after watching Sixty Symbols and Periodic Videos for years. Love it! I salute the dedication of scientists like Dr. Gray, but I'm a bit envious of them having jobs that are so interesting. Beats staring at the same monthly reports and getting excited about how many office supplies get ordered every month! Bravo to Brady and Meghan!
actually it means _"ten thousand of"_ the german word for _"tens of thousands"_ would be _"zehntausende"_ in case you refere to the title of the picture :x
Stephan Bischoff That's actually what it says on the poster. "Zehntausende" means just like he said "tens of thousands of". "ten thousand of" means "Zehntausend". Similar "Hunderte" and "Hundert" means "hundreds of" and "hundred".
Brady, i am in love with your work. Great journalism, impressive topics in every video. I admire this form of research. you let people inform us, who actually know what theyre talking about, instead of distorting every story so far that it can hardly be called science anymore. Subscribed to all of your channels i found so far!
I love listening to this lady speak. Knowledgeable and seemingly extremely light-hearted, I surmise I would enjoy her as my professor. Just wanted to put that out there :-)
Very nice video, I like the way she explained the photograph and showed the corresponding Hubble images. Must watch for middle / high school kids who are interested in science.
Brady there is also another great Hubble composite image,the 'Ultra-Deep-Field', a sky patch in Cygnus/Lyra, that's also very dense with thousands of galaxies
I think this is my favourite Deep Sky Video (it might be a tie with "More and more and more stars (M30)". I've watched it about 60 times, maybe more? It is so very interesting and Dr. Megan Gray is such a great (astronomical) story teller! Keep making these, please!
I subscribed just now.. I loved deep sky photos or videos.. thanks for sharing... I hope one day I could see those images through an advance telescope.
I love these images from Hubble. I have a 4.5 inch telescope and mainly observe the planets when I can get the chance and I am not sure if I would be seeing galaxies or not when I view stars.
I absolutely love this image. I was one of the people who kept going online and help find galaxies as well as bubbles in the gas clouds. I miss doing that. Beautiful images...
10:00 From what I gather, that "star-forming monster" is the result of two galaxies that formed separately and eventually were drawn or pushed together, yes? In my head, I'm imagining two semis smashing together, only instead of spewing out shrapnel, they've spewing out stars. Is that type of event something intense and chaotic whose effects can be "felt", as it were, throughout the whole galaxy? Or, because of the relative size and time scale, could those galaxies' daily lives go on largely unchanged regardless?
Ben Green Not an analogy, really, but just a scaling. Gravity does indeed reach infinitely far, but a star similar in mass to the sun would have to pass fairly close (say, somewhat closer than San Bernardino) to measurably affect our solar system. The orbit of Neptune would be about 450 meters from our sun. To invoke a collision it would have to be at least within that circle, I imagine.
I feel sad for the millions of people growing up in cities the world over who have never looked up and seen a starry sky. Excellent work Brady, thank you. And Dr Gray.
Thanks so much for these videos. :D On the whiteboard behind Dr. Gray, there is a drawing of an H-R diagram with (what I think is) a track line indicating the evolution of a sun-like star. I would love to see videos about both of these things: H-R diagram, and evolution of the sun.
AM i able to download an HD version of this somewhere? would love to print this off and hang it, just knowing i have now seen some of those smudges up close and what wonders they truly hold!
After graduating to an electrical engineer, I think and I'll go and follow my dreams and try to study as an astronomer. Everything about space is just so fascinating.
This only strengthens my idea of galaxy formation through the accretion of the smaller dwarf galaxies as seen in the distant visible universe, dense populations of these smaller galaxies. Only closer to us do we see more and larger developed galaxies, which are still munching on other galaxies.
AMAZING... I wish there was a 4K picture on the internet that I could zoom in and out too see it as a whole or just individual objects (galaxies ofc). Just for the pleasure of doing it :)
10 лет назад
I'm sure this has been noted before, but as a native and more importantly pedantic German I can't let this go by completely quitely: Actually it says "Zehntausende Galaxien ..." not "Zehntausend Galaxien ...". The "e" at the end of "zehntausend" is an undeterminate plural indicator which makes this more like "tenthousands of galaxies ...". I just thought, I'd mention this, because the number in the video title seems so terribly specific, when it really shouldn't be. Other than that, this is an awesome video. I always love these videos with Dr. Meghan Gray. She's so beautifully sincere yet passionate about this. :)
It sort of melts my brain to think about those distant red galaxies. Just the distance and the time and everything. There's just something about them that boggles the mind.
Is there a focusing ring on the Hubble or other deep sky telescope? and how is it marked, 100 light years away, 1000 light years...? or is it just set to infinity? (and beyond)
Is there a composite image of all the hubble images together? As cool as it to go through each shot individually, looking at the entire thing in one shot and zooming in and out would be amazing!
"Astronomers love their acronyms. The more contrived the better." This is an important part of the aesthetics of many fields of endeavor. It gives them an arcane flavour.
10 лет назад+1
Whenever I think of the other galaxies... I feel like... I mean, our galaxy is already HUGE. It would take millennia for us to travel from one point to another. But other galaxies, they are SO, SO, SO unimaginably far away. And to think we don't even know our galaxy fully. We don't even know if we have other planets like Earth in it. And these galaxies are just teasing us, beyond our reach. It's completely amazing to me.
Curious about two things: First, is there a reason why some parts of the sky have more large scale structure than others? Second, are the red galaxies red only because of their distance away from us (perhaps light waves begin to break up or lengthen after traveling billions of light years?) or because they are also moving away from us faster than closer galaxies?
All the sensors in our cell phones and most likely Brady's camera are CMOS, not CCD, but that brings up a question: are there advantages for CCDs in these applications? I know CMOS usually has less bloom, is cheaper and uses much less power, so why no widespread adoption?
Man, I dig listening to intelligent people. I love listening to Dr. Grey who is very calm and soothing, but also Professor Merrifield who is quite frenetic and the complete opposite.
What telescope was used to make this picture and does anyone know if I can buy a copy of the poster Dr. Meghan is holding or even a copy of the Hubble Deep Field or Ultra Deep Field image? I want to get one for my son, my best friend and myself.
This is funny to me, my third grade teacher told me that outside our galaxy there was nothing, that it was the entirety of the Universe. My eighth grade science teacher told me there were hundreds of galaxies. Now, we know there are hundreds upon billions of them, and our Universe itself may not be the only one. Fascinating.
Wow, I'm impressed by your apparent longevity. It sounds as if you went to school during the 1920s when astronomers finally resolved their argument about whether galaxies were merely like the other nebulae in the Milky Way, or whether they were distinct "island universes" like the Milky Way itself (a term used by Immanuel Kant in 1755). Or perhaps your teachers were sharing information that was somewhat out of date by the time you went to school.
I could listen to this lady all day long, beautiful.
She is so clear, such a quiet charachter. My favourite scientist/teacher.
character is how it spelled
@@ringscircles142 ee done alrite wif de overs tho
@@ringscircles142
it*'s* spelled
I always love the deep sky series, but this one in particular was amazing! I liked being taught about the science, but also getting a peek into how the research itself was performed!!
Higgins2001 thanks
That‘s the beauty of your videos: Listening carefully, being serious about the science, but every once in a while asking a personal question. And there you can see the fascination they still feel about it in their eyes and faces. For me I got a glimpse of that when I pointed my camera with the 300 telelense on my mighty StarAdventurer star tracker at M 87 in the virgo cluster. And after stacking 50 pictures, out came dozens of galaxies around this beautiful elliptic galaxy, in every single corner of the picture! It‘s a perfect beginners target, and I loved it 🤩!
Always love to see one of these featuring Dr. Gray; she so clearly loves what she does, and her enthusiasm causes the viewer to get pulled in a little further than would have been the case otherwise.
Thank you, Brady and Meghan.
what humbles me is how much time, effort, dedication and care goes into even the smallest bit of science that we get to hear about. Ten yeas of ones life studying this single image, its every nooks and carnies, every distortion, smudge and blob. That, my friends, is what it takes to do science.
"Carnies" are what it takes to do carnivals.
It's sad really
Dr Meghan Gray is so awesome,really love her videos.That's just one patch of sky with so many galaxies and stars.....mind blowing stuff ! I'm so glad there are people like her dedicating their lives to solving just a piece of the overall puzzle of the universe.
Just amazing !
Your videos are always interesting and I don't care that you only upload now and then. As long as they keep coming I will be happy.
BirdSpy Aus thanks for watching - I really enjoyed making this one because it tells us so much about a real science research project
DeepSkyVideos thank you for the great work =)
More from Mrs Gray! I could sit here and listen for hours.
Please do a follow up on this with the new JWST images
One of the most outstanding series of videos I've ever watched regarding astronomy & astophysics...whenever I point my telescope & camera combo to do some electronic assisted astronomy, I first search on DeepSkyVideos library to see if anything relative to my target is uploaded...trully gives a super boost to my observing sessions! Love u all guys... we need MORE of such GREAT videos!!!
What a delight to have someone this dedicated and this smart and well spoken narrate a video such as this!! Thanks and please carry on!!!!
I like your dedication and passion. Great videoclip, I enjoyed.
It just makes me happy to know there are people in the world studying this stuff. Keep up the great videos!!
It is always such a distinct pleasure to watch Dr. Gray narrate one of these videos. Her way of explaining what she is viewing is absolutely clear and distinct. Thanks you.
Fantastic. One of my favorite videos so far.
I could look at space pictures and listen to astronomers talk about them every day for the rest of my life and die a happy man. Thank you Brady.
When she's talking about the one galaxy cluster behind another, it's so weird to realise that the more distant cluster as seen in the photograph is possibly thousands of years further back in the time than the cluster right in front of it.
One picture of two things, and the picture is seeing one of them thousands of years further in the past than the other. It makes me feel weird.
Also the way she says "flocculent" is awesome.
This picture ilustrates very good the lightcone concept. All the light we see is NOW for us, but for those on the other end our PAST is their NOW.
It'll be a heck of a lot more than mere thousands of light years further back, I can tell you that much. The Andromeda Galaxy is over 2.5 _million_ light years away, and that our closest neighbour!
marzcorp
Yeah, I guess I didn't really think that part through. Even though I know The Milky Way is ~100,000 light years in diameter.
Thanks for the correction.
Well, down at the Creation Museum they don't believe the light we are seeing from those galaxies is really billions of years old. They go with the mere thousands of years as in your first estimate.
10,000 Galaxies in one Glance
Dr Meghan Gray on a long-term project to intensely study a small postage stamp of sky!!!
More about STAGES: bit.ly/STAGES_space
Just discovered this series after watching Sixty Symbols and Periodic Videos for years. Love it! I salute the dedication of scientists like Dr. Gray, but I'm a bit envious of them having jobs that are so interesting. Beats staring at the same monthly reports and getting excited about how many office supplies get ordered every month! Bravo to Brady and Meghan!
Am aware it maybe should be "tens OF thousands OF" but that is not quite such a snappy title in English!
actually it means _"ten thousand of"_ the german word for _"tens of thousands"_ would be _"zehntausende"_
in case you refere to the title of the picture :x
Stephan Bischoff That's actually what it says on the poster. "Zehntausende" means just like he said "tens of thousands of". "ten thousand of" means "Zehntausend".
Similar "Hunderte" and "Hundert" means "hundreds of" and "hundred".
pcfreak1992 thats true :D
And in dutch it would be "tienduizenden"
'n bult
This is by far the Best video I've seen for years. Thank You so much for this.
Great video. She speaks with a soothing authority on the subject.
Brady, i am in love with your work. Great journalism, impressive topics in every video. I admire this form of research. you let people inform us, who actually know what theyre talking about, instead of distorting every story so far that it can hardly be called science anymore. Subscribed to all of your channels i found so far!
I love listening to this lady speak. Knowledgeable and seemingly extremely light-hearted, I surmise I would enjoy her as my professor.
Just wanted to put that out there :-)
yeah i felt that too. calmness.
Very nice video, I like the way she explained the photograph and showed the corresponding Hubble images. Must watch for middle / high school kids who are interested in science.
What a wealth of phenomena in such a limited patch of sky! Thanks Mrs Gray and thanks Brady!
I love listen to Meghan, she explains so clearly. Great video. Why is this recommended 6 years after it was created?
Wonderfully articulate. One thing to know, another to communicate.
Love love everything about this video. Thanks!!!
Thank you for sharing such a beautiful image.
saw the video now but very nice way of explaining things . like a seasoned teacher :)
this is probably my favorite Deep Sky video you have ever published Brady!!!
10 years well spent. I thank you for your contribution to the betterment of collective human knowledge!
Awesome teacher and video. The best to you Brady
I love Meghan's videos, this was no exception. Great stuff.
Brady there is also another great Hubble composite image,the 'Ultra-Deep-Field', a sky patch in Cygnus/Lyra, that's also very dense with thousands of galaxies
I truly enjoyed this video. Thank you Brady & Dr. Gray!
I would love to have printed version of this poster.
Looks like you can Buy a 80x80 Poster here:
German > Eng. goo.gl/q06YT2
Thanks. Somehow I missed "can be bought from" part of this page.
I would love to have a job like this. The data they use is so beautiful and the science behind it is so interesting.
You could join the Galaxy Zoo citizen science project and be a volunteer ... somewhat like this.
Daniel Mocsny Yeah? I'll check it out!
I think this is my favourite Deep Sky Video (it might be a tie with "More and more and more stars (M30)". I've watched it about 60 times, maybe more? It is so very interesting and Dr. Megan Gray is such a great (astronomical) story teller! Keep making these, please!
If you were to watch it 10,000 times, that would be one for each galaxy.
Getting there ;)
I subscribed just now.. I loved deep sky photos or videos.. thanks for sharing... I hope one day I could see those images through an advance telescope.
One of the most amazing videos. Thank you Brady.
Great presentation..again!
I know of the Deep Sky where a long exposure of the Hubble of a patch of sky where supposedly, little was in, but found many galaxies.
"'Space,' it says, 'is big, really big. You just won't believe how vastly, hugely, mind-mindbogglingly big it is...'"
you may think it's a long way down the road to the chemist's, but that's just peanuts to space.
*"DON'T PANIC!"*
😁😁😁😁
@@Allan_aka_RocKITEman And don't forget your towel.
@@spikespa5208 >>> 😊
Yet some of us do some come from the black hole didn't you know 🤭🤫
I love to hear Dr. Gray explain anything
I love galaxies! I would have loved to visit you and have you show me all these and many more of the galaxies in your field.
Fascinating! Thank you so much for the upload.
I love these images from Hubble. I have a 4.5 inch telescope and mainly observe the planets when I can get the chance and I am not sure if I would be seeing galaxies or not when I view stars.
I absolutely love this image. I was one of the people who kept going online and help find galaxies as well as bubbles in the gas clouds. I miss doing that. Beautiful images...
Love u from INDIA.
LOVE UR EFFORT.
UR APPROACH.
thank you all who did any thing for this vid.
10:00 From what I gather, that "star-forming monster" is the result of two galaxies that formed separately and eventually were drawn or pushed together, yes? In my head, I'm imagining two semis smashing together, only instead of spewing out shrapnel, they've spewing out stars.
Is that type of event something intense and chaotic whose effects can be "felt", as it were, throughout the whole galaxy? Or, because of the relative size and time scale, could those galaxies' daily lives go on largely unchanged regardless?
puncheex2 In that analogy, though, how far-reaching would the pull of gravity be from those stars?
Ben Green Not an analogy, really, but just a scaling. Gravity does indeed reach infinitely far, but a star similar in mass to the sun would have to pass fairly close (say, somewhat closer than San Bernardino) to measurably affect our solar system. The orbit of Neptune would be about 450 meters from our sun. To invoke a collision it would have to be at least within that circle, I imagine.
I feel sad for the millions of people growing up in cities the world over who have never looked up and seen a starry sky. Excellent work Brady, thank you. And Dr Gray.
Great video. Very informative. Like your work Brady!
I’m in highschool and in my sophomore year my teacher showed us that picture and it’s so cool to hear it explained !
Keep learning!
What an awesome episode
Thanks so much for these videos. :D
On the whiteboard behind Dr. Gray, there is a drawing of an H-R diagram with (what I think is) a track line indicating the evolution of a sun-like star.
I would love to see videos about both of these things: H-R diagram, and evolution of the sun.
AM i able to download an HD version of this somewhere? would love to print this off and hang it, just knowing i have now seen some of those smudges up close and what wonders they truly hold!
www.nottingham.ac.uk/astronomy/stages/images/poster_v.jpg
Here you go :)
www.nottingham.ac.uk/astronomy/stages/images/poster_v.jpg
Pull up. N A S A
After graduating to an electrical engineer, I think and I'll go and follow my dreams and try to study as an astronomer. Everything about space is just so fascinating.
Thanks for shearing your knowledge.
Her voice puts me to sleep in a good way. I just listen while falling asleep hoping I’ll have space travel dreams.
This only strengthens my idea of galaxy formation through the accretion of the smaller dwarf galaxies as seen in the distant visible universe, dense populations of these smaller galaxies. Only closer to us do we see more and larger developed galaxies, which are still munching on other galaxies.
awesome video as always. It would be interesting to see a 3D projection of that image.
AMAZING... I wish there was a 4K picture on the internet that I could zoom in and out too see it as a whole or just individual objects (galaxies ofc). Just for the pleasure of doing it :)
I'm sure this has been noted before, but as a native and more importantly pedantic German I can't let this go by completely quitely: Actually it says "Zehntausende Galaxien ..." not "Zehntausend Galaxien ...". The "e" at the end of "zehntausend" is an undeterminate plural indicator which makes this more like "tenthousands of galaxies ...".
I just thought, I'd mention this, because the number in the video title seems so terribly specific, when it really shouldn't be.
Other than that, this is an awesome video. I always love these videos with Dr. Meghan Gray. She's so beautifully sincere yet passionate about this. :)
It sort of melts my brain to think about those distant red galaxies. Just the distance and the time and everything. There's just something about them that boggles the mind.
Is there a focusing ring on the Hubble or other deep sky telescope? and how is it marked, 100 light years away, 1000 light years...? or is it just set to infinity? (and beyond)
More of this woman please! I find her accent mesmerising
Very interesting video.
Wow. Just wow. Especially the bit with the Einstein ring. I have never seen a picture like that.
Is there a composite image of all the hubble images together? As cool as it to go through each shot individually, looking at the entire thing in one shot and zooming in and out would be amazing!
Would love to see a follow up video on what was learned from this work.
The thumb up at an arm's length is 2 degrees of an angle. 0,5 degrees is for the nail of the pinky
"Astronomers love their acronyms. The more contrived the better." This is an important part of the aesthetics of many fields of endeavor. It gives them an arcane flavour.
Whenever I think of the other galaxies... I feel like... I mean, our galaxy is already HUGE. It would take millennia for us to travel from one point to another. But other galaxies, they are SO, SO, SO unimaginably far away. And to think we don't even know our galaxy fully. We don't even know if we have other planets like Earth in it. And these galaxies are just teasing us, beyond our reach.
It's completely amazing to me.
We don't even know the dirt under your fingernails fully. Human ignorance is abundant at every scale.
Is this image related in any way to the Hubble Deep Field?
Dr Meghan Gray you are one of the people that make me proud to be Canadian.
Please do a few videos on Lanikaea!
I want to buy that poster now
good video but it says camera on back on vista as apposed to of at like 1:10
Nice information. Thanks. Why does the distant point like galaxies not have a diffraction pattern as the stars do?
so how's this compared to the Hubble deep field, and ultra deep field pics or collections?
i enjoy all your videos very interesting, thank you
Amazing! Would be like watching a movie within a movie within a movie within a movie that is playing in one single pixel of a television screen
Absolutely fascinating. 🤩
Thank you for sharing 🙏
Intelligent and beautiful.
Excellent video.
10:18 reminds me of M82.
Holy cow, now that is something worth displaying on a wall, beautiful.
Absolutely fascinating!
Really impressed how the professor just points at a blob on the big picture: "that one is this galaxy"
Curious about two things: First, is there a reason why some parts of the sky have more large scale structure than others? Second, are the red galaxies red only because of their distance away from us (perhaps light waves begin to break up or lengthen after traveling billions of light years?) or because they are also moving away from us faster than closer galaxies?
All the sensors in our cell phones and most likely Brady's camera are CMOS, not CCD, but that brings up a question: are there advantages for CCDs in these applications? I know CMOS usually has less bloom, is cheaper and uses much less power, so why no widespread adoption?
Man, I dig listening to intelligent people. I love listening to Dr. Grey who is very calm and soothing, but also Professor Merrifield who is quite frenetic and the complete opposite.
thanks brady!
What telescope was used to make this picture and does anyone know if I can buy a copy of the poster Dr. Meghan is holding or even a copy of the Hubble Deep Field or Ultra Deep Field image? I want to get one for my son, my best friend and myself.
This is funny to me, my third grade teacher told me that outside our galaxy there was nothing, that it was the entirety of the Universe. My eighth grade science teacher told me there were hundreds of galaxies. Now, we know there are hundreds upon billions of them, and our Universe itself may not be the only one. Fascinating.
Wow, I'm impressed by your apparent longevity. It sounds as if you went to school during the 1920s when astronomers finally resolved their argument about whether galaxies were merely like the other nebulae in the Milky Way, or whether they were distinct "island universes" like the Milky Way itself (a term used by Immanuel Kant in 1755). Or perhaps your teachers were sharing information that was somewhat out of date by the time you went to school.
Very well presented