Why Does The Universe Look Like This?

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  • Опубликовано: 14 май 2024
  • Thank you to Wondrium for sponsoring today's video! Signup for your FREE trial to Wondrium here: ow.ly/3bA050L1hTL
    --------------------------------------------
    Researched and Written by Jon Farrow
    Narrated and Edited by David Kelly
    Animations by the superb Jero Squartini www.fiverr.com/share/0v7Kjv using Manim - MIT License, (c) 2020-2023 3Blue1Brown LLC
    Laniakea animation by Alperaym
    Incredible thumbnail art by Ettore Mazza, the GOAT: ettore.mazz...
    Huge thanks to Daniel Pomarède for the use of his images of Laniakea and our local cosmological neighborhood: / danielpomarede
    Thank to Pablo Carlos Budassi for his wonderful images of the KBC Void, Shapley Supercluster and Bootes Void.
    Stock footage taken from Videoblocks and Artgrid, music from Epidemic Sound, Artlist and Silver Maple. Space imagery also used from NASA and ESO.
    Image Credits:
    Visualisations of the QCD Vacuum
    Derek D Leinweber CSSM University of Adelaide
    Observable Universe by Andrew Z Colvin
    KBC Void, Shapley Supercluster and Bootes Void by Pablo Carlos Budassi, CC BY-SA 4.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/..., via Wikimedia Commons
    UK from space European Space Agency, CC BY-SA 3.0 IGO creativecommons.org/licenses/..., via Wikimedia Commons
    KBC Void, Shapley Supercluster and Bootes Void by Pablo Carlos Budassi, CC BY-SA 4.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/..., via Wikimedia Commons
    Galactic Filament by Andrew Pontzen and Fabio Governato, CC BY 2.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/..., via Wikimedia Commons
    SDSS Plates by EdPost, CC BY-SA 3.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/..., via Wikimedia Commons
    Jim Peebles Juan Diego Soler, CC BY 2.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/..., via Wikimedia Commons
    Zeldovich By A. T. Service - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    Martin Rees By Festival della Scienza, CC BY-SA 2.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    Richard Gott By A. T. Service - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    George Smoot By Nomo michael hoefner www.zwo5.de - Own work, CC BY 3.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    John C Mather By Christopher Michel - John Mather, CC BY 2.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    LHC By Maximilien Brice, CERN - CERN Document Server, CC BY-SA 3.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    00:00 Introduction
    05:41 Mapping The Cosmos
    16:40 Meatball Honeycomb Sponge (Structure of the Universe)
    21:55 Cosmic Seeds (Origin of Structure)
    39:36 Problems With Copernicus
    #cosmicweb

Комментарии • 5 тыс.

  • @FlyWithMe_666
    @FlyWithMe_666 Год назад +6769

    Wow, I didn’t know the universe is so big! This must be like thousands of football fields.

    • @davorinhorbec2793
      @davorinhorbec2793 Год назад +379

      Thousands? Much, much more...!!!

    • @subvind
      @subvind Год назад +197

      how many monkeys does it take to screw in a light bulb?

    • @SofaKingShit
      @SofaKingShit Год назад +384

      Enough room for thousands of three dimensional things. Thus it's actually more like three thousand.

    • @subvind
      @subvind Год назад +60

      how many football fields does it take to play the superbowl?

    • @HumbleHonkingEnthusiast
      @HumbleHonkingEnthusiast Год назад +144

      Billions and billions of thousands yes

  • @kermitefrog64
    @kermitefrog64 Год назад +279

    The map of the Universe reminds me of the mapping of the human brain with its billions of neurons.

    • @jugganaut26
      @jugganaut26 Год назад +25

      I know there are differences with the physics of how stuff moves around in each, but yeah I see that too 100%. At one point in this video as it was zooming out into greater and greater superstructures, I said aloud, It's a brain!

    • @torgenxblazterzoid
      @torgenxblazterzoid 11 месяцев назад +28

      @@jugganaut26 it is the mind of God.

    • @performtransform
      @performtransform 11 месяцев назад +6

      Strange correlation, isn't it?

    • @mianadahlia
      @mianadahlia 11 месяцев назад

      some believed, the reason why universe kept expanding is bcoz its a brain or body of a creature (or god) thats maturing and coming more into consciousness. thats why pre historic creatures (or its creations) are less intelligent. it represented the mind of a child, dominant in subconscious until it evolves into more and more intelligent creatures such us. if its true, for me its on its teenage phase yet, smart but self destructive. everything is cycling like a loop

    • @David-jc6yh
      @David-jc6yh 11 месяцев назад +4

      Looking out, looking in. So what must be in the middle/center? Even more (kenetic) between All of everyones all the yous and mes time/dimension whereas time is constant of right triangle and dimension= 2, +/- or light/dark, or di. = 2( 1opisite 1) and so on!

  • @mitekillem
    @mitekillem 11 месяцев назад +154

    When a leaf is caught in a river it quickly aligns itself to the plane of the water's surface and then begins traveling along with the swirling and rotating water molecules surrounding it.
    Odd how on such a macro scale, things behave with a natural simplicity.

    • @curiosity19
      @curiosity19 3 месяца назад +4

      A leaf on a river and how it travels along it is what I would often use as a metaphor of life.

    • @DeliMeatTree
      @DeliMeatTree Месяц назад

      But they don't. Leaves will eventually catch, then they will catch larger twigs and branches. Then entire trees and even rocks.
      This can literally create land masses.

  • @TheRandom0ne
    @TheRandom0ne Год назад +27

    Our galaxy is somewhere in the elbow of the Elden Beast, good to know.

    • @zyloft2053
      @zyloft2053 Год назад +6

      so our universe is just one big erdtree

    • @reflectcard6258
      @reflectcard6258 7 дней назад +1

      time to become the elden lord then, dlc in 2 months

  • @mcrichton46
    @mcrichton46 Год назад +1147

    Ever since I was a kid I’ve gazed into the night skies, and to this day I still get the same feeling I used to as a child - fascination. But as I’ve gotten older, my love and appreciation for the stars has only grown. Even if we truly are so insignificant in the grand scheme of the cosmos, I couldn’t picture a better backdrop to be an observer in.

    • @pod9363
      @pod9363 Год назад +59

      I’ve always viewed self-conscious life as more significant than any multi-light year spanning rocks or gas clouds tbbqh

    • @joukokulhelm6844
      @joukokulhelm6844 Год назад +32

      Yes, the dredd and aww at same time. There is no feeling like lookking into night sky.
      I have same thing, this weird feeling that i diden't understand as child. I feel alive, even when i'm depressed, just by starwatching.
      Have always worked better than any antidebressant for me.

    • @NOT_SURE..
      @NOT_SURE.. Год назад +4

      have you read 'worlds in collision' by velokovsky ?

    • @quintonrichards4805
      @quintonrichards4805 Год назад +8

      It’s the only thing that provides me comfort in the thought of what if there isn’t a God. Somehow it’s magnificent beauty brings peace none the less.

    • @NOT_SURE..
      @NOT_SURE.. Год назад +15

      @@quintonrichards4805 Im insomniac, dyslexic and an atheist ,
      i lay awake at night wondering if there is a Dog.

  • @ryanbaker7404
    @ryanbaker7404 Год назад +688

    I'll rank this series right up there with my favorite growing up: Carl Sagan's and PBS' "Cosmos". Waiting patiently for my dad to arrive home after work with the latest VHS rental seemed to take forever. And decades later, we have a free series that rivals it in scale, scope, and beauty. Thank you to every single person involved!

  • @shawnnixon2616
    @shawnnixon2616 Год назад +72

    I swear. I've always believed that we are just micro organisms inside something's body, just like the ones we have in our body. Looking at this scale it's hard to even say that us humans are even close to the size of an atom of this "body" shown here. Unbelievable

    • @floristfindspeace
      @floristfindspeace 6 месяцев назад +10

      i legit thought i was the only one. it’s really odd to read this multiple times on this video, like it makes me wonder where that thought comes from

    • @Aalvye
      @Aalvye 5 месяцев назад +9

      @@floristfindspeace Cosmic egg for a higher dimensional being? The brain? Honestly how far we have managed to zoom in AND out from our perspective is pretty impressive.

    • @goldenmoonhorizon4086
      @goldenmoonhorizon4086 4 месяца назад +3

      Not even close. Consider this:
      How small the area at the tip of a sharp pencil is (a fraction of a millimetre?) relative to the size of the Known Universe (roughly 90 billion light years across?) is how small a Planck length is relative to the area of the tip of a sharp pencil. Based on the scaling, we are even smaller that the quarks that are the smallest known subatomic particles. These particles are so small that an atom would be like the entire solar system and the quarks would be the size of a grain of sand.

    • @Zeng-rv9mv
      @Zeng-rv9mv 3 месяца назад

      'Here come the Men in Black'.

    • @CampingforCool41
      @CampingforCool41 Месяц назад

      Size has no meaning in the face of infinity. We are both infinitely large and infinitely small in comparison.

  • @universemaps
    @universemaps Год назад +83

    This video is wonderful! An honor to have contributed with my voids and supercluster images!

  • @sunkid86
    @sunkid86 Год назад +367

    I am a bit relieved that it takes 5 people to put this together, but honestly I thought there would be about 10-15 people working on these. One of the highest quality content on RUclips I have seen, maybe the best. Have a lovely holiday y'all.

    • @artdonovandesign
      @artdonovandesign Год назад +2

      Y'all

    • @john-ic5pz
      @john-ic5pz Год назад

      lol
      Would any propaganda piece convince anyone without having high production values & the narrator's posh accent doesn't hurt, eh?

    • @john-ic5pz
      @john-ic5pz Год назад

      @@artdonovandesign y'all = you all.
      Sadly modern English has no convenient plural 3rd party pronoun.

    • @nikiindzhiev5369
      @nikiindzhiev5369 Год назад +9

      @@john-ic5pz how is this a propaganda piece?

    • @michaelmoore7975
      @michaelmoore7975 Год назад +4

      @@john-ic5pz Mayonnaise= Mayonnaise some big ol' trees ova dare.

  • @NikHem343
    @NikHem343 Год назад +682

    What an unbelievable feat. That’s like standing on the bottom of the ocean and being able to map the entire planet geographically

    • @teflonishighlytoxic222
      @teflonishighlytoxic222 Год назад +178

      it's more like standing at the bottom of the ocean and mapping the waves on the surface, completely ignorant that anything could even exist beyond the water, wholly unaware of the concept of the planet.

    • @ciscornBIG
      @ciscornBIG Год назад +6

      Is it like that? Is that what it is like? Heckin' sciencerino!

    • @user-vt9ce4cv8w
      @user-vt9ce4cv8w Год назад +3

      Umm. No? It's nothing like that unless you're a being that's the size of 1 planck length... The universe is massive and no one has an idea how big it truly is.

    • @ileanamuntean7338
      @ileanamuntean7338 Год назад

      HI Nik, I also love the cube of 7.

    • @douglaidlaw740
      @douglaidlaw740 Год назад +3

      If it sounds impossible, it probably is.

  • @DemonSliime
    @DemonSliime Год назад +11

    The universe has to be at least 12 tractors.

  • @zachattack4666
    @zachattack4666 2 месяца назад +20

    I thought i was looking at elden beast💀

    • @course3620
      @course3620 Месяц назад +5

      i guess we do live in the lands between fr

  • @Stellar-Forge
    @Stellar-Forge Год назад +668

    I legitimately get excited when I get notified about new episodes from HOTU. Truly top-notch quality production. More people need to know about this channel.

  • @tortysoft
    @tortysoft Год назад +31

    I've been thinking about these topics for decades. I chatted to my young son about them. He is about to finish his PhD in Physics. He knows more now than I can list. The best I can hope to do to follow his eight years of in depth study is watch videos like this - or talk to him :-)

  • @jdthein
    @jdthein Год назад +10

    This series is truly a masterpiece. It should be required viewing for every schoolkid on the planet.

  • @empiyrr2133
    @empiyrr2133 Год назад +8

    We are inside the Elden beast

  • @Cosmic.Origin.exe.
    @Cosmic.Origin.exe. Год назад +133

    This was so well put together my guy. The production value of this is 10/10.
    Simply brilliant.

    • @john-ic5pz
      @john-ic5pz Год назад

      Avatar had great production values
      ....yet is recognized as a work of fiction.
      Sadly, these documentaries are taken as fact rather than an elaborate work on science fiction & physics runs in circles chasing dark matter and dark energy.
      The energy isn't dark. The physicists have their eyes closed...ignoring the electromagnetic force and worshipping at Einstein's altar of a gravity only universe.

  • @sjennica
    @sjennica Год назад +88

    Whenever I lose perspective and feel like the walls are closing in on me, our unimaginable universe and its limitless wonder saves the day.

    • @ameeruddinsyed1376
      @ameeruddinsyed1376 Год назад +2

      Me too; Here for same reason...

    • @reasonerenlightened2456
      @reasonerenlightened2456 Год назад

      If the radius from now to the beginning of the observable Universe is 13.8 then how come the radius is 46 in one direction? Non-sensical?

    • @gumbaltrophy6946
      @gumbaltrophy6946 Год назад +1

      @@reasonerenlightened2456 The light that travels the longest gets stretched by the greatest amount, and the object that emitted that light is now at a greater distance because the universe is expanding. We can see objects up to 46.1 billion light-years away precisely because of the expanding universe.And if there is not a big bang i mean if the bigbang theory is false forgot my upper explanation ,then we have to find a other way to calculate the age of universe

  • @joshuameadows4922
    @joshuameadows4922 Год назад +6

    It's absolutely insane to try and imagine the sheer scale of the universe. The milky way alone is so massive, yet it's only 1 of millions if not billions of other galaxies. Then the space between these galaxies is hundreds of times larger than that. So many mysteries

    • @alonzoroldan8768
      @alonzoroldan8768 2 месяца назад

      Its theorized that there are as many as 2 trillion galaxies.🤯

  • @StarBigBang
    @StarBigBang Месяц назад

    Been watching this playlist from start, and hearing about Wondrium, and actually processing everything you've put into this series so far; i see how they have inspired you. I love it, once I finish this playlist, i'll probably go check them out.

  • @cloverassassinscreed
    @cloverassassinscreed Год назад +96

    You taught me more in 45 minutes about the universe, than learned my entire life, in January I officially go to school to become an astrophysicist... What help you have been with only mere words, that resonate on every level, knowledge and abundance collectively given in its most simplistic form. 100,000 thank you s ❤️

    • @ednanonono
      @ednanonono Год назад +3

      Congratulations!!! 🎉

    • @cloverassassinscreed
      @cloverassassinscreed Год назад +3

      @@ednanonono thank you!!

    • @arnav8885
      @arnav8885 Год назад +2

      Congratulations

    • @artdonovandesign
      @artdonovandesign Год назад +6

      Entering the field of Astrophysics requires a profound level of accuracy in all of its supporting disciplines: mathematics, geometry, trigonometry, algebra, etc., in addition to writing papers with an equal amount of accuracy in grammar, punctuation and spelling.

    • @wlarsen70
      @wlarsen70 Год назад +1

      @Janik Bily
      BS😑

  • @uss_04
    @uss_04 Год назад +135

    I’m surprised that this is an ongoing series and not just clips of other shows from the past. Glad to see this continuing content.

    • @KGB.83
      @KGB.83 Год назад +1

      He's copied other popular shows.. I'm ashamed at everyone else for not seeing it..

    • @devonwilliams2423
      @devonwilliams2423 Год назад +20

      @@KGB.83 Yeah and history is repeating itself, people who know how to put information together in an entertaining way regardless if it has been said before is the value of the content.
      Im sure all of this stuff has been said months and years prior, but the value of this product is that it is being made now, with a unique twist that only HOTU can add (Narration, Animation and much more.)

    • @SStupendous
      @SStupendous Год назад +22

      @@KGB.83 Shit, you mean he uses and displays some of the same information while talking about the same thing? Crazy

    • @jesseyu69420
      @jesseyu69420 Год назад +14

      @@KGB.83 Wow! That’s crazy! This channel is talking about the same topics as other space-related channels! That means they’re copying other people! I can’t believe anyone would do this!

  • @fotografiaenarrativafotogr5028
    @fotografiaenarrativafotogr5028 Год назад +2

    The best video I've seen on the issue to date. The clarity is impressive, and the visuals are very good.

  • @BigJMC
    @BigJMC Год назад +5

    Could we all be just surfing through space in a black hole just to end up being spewed out by a white-hole in another universe?
    I mean could the big bang be the result of massive amount of matter being push through an infinitely small space from another universe?

    • @cjsk45
      @cjsk45 4 месяца назад +1

      Yes.

    • @user-hi3vr2wz5c
      @user-hi3vr2wz5c Месяц назад

      Pan Dimensional Time Dilated Gravitational Wave Surfing.

  • @zachhoy
    @zachhoy Год назад +57

    I can't count how many times I've heard the story of the universe but this one stuck with me much more deeply than others, very good cohesion of concepts

  • @sadievonfange9529
    @sadievonfange9529 Год назад +124

    15 yrs of RUclips science videos , this is the only time I have ever had the hairs on my body stand on end. This is the best video I have ever watched. I know how it sounds.

    • @Shinzon23
      @Shinzon23 Год назад +5

      Go watch MelodySheeps videos on the moon and the three parter he did called "Life Beyond". I especially like Museum of Alien Life one.

    • @cyanyde6724
      @cyanyde6724 Год назад +3

      I was tempted to write the same thing, my friend. And I don't comment very often, anymore.

    • @reasonerenlightened2456
      @reasonerenlightened2456 Год назад +1

      if the radius from now to the beginning of the observable Universe is 13.8 then how come the radius is 46 in one direction? Non-sensical?

    • @suharixxx3
      @suharixxx3 Год назад +1

      @@reasonerenlightened2456 You can google answer for that very easily.

    • @Kerbezena
      @Kerbezena Год назад +1

      Check out "Science saved my soul" by Phil Hellenes. It's beautiful.

  • @rogerbaker5976
    @rogerbaker5976 Год назад +9

    The format of this series makes it remarkably entertaining and informative. It is also up to date, respective of the viewer's intelligence, and encompasses the full range of topics suggested by its name. I am completely hooked and thankful to those involved in its production. Keep the series coming!

  • @2msvalkyrie529
    @2msvalkyrie529 11 месяцев назад +1

    That marvellous feeling of elation when you realise you are
    a meaningless speck in an infinity of Time and Space and that your existence is utterly pointless.

  • @markodin2009
    @markodin2009 Год назад +396

    This video is a masterpiece. From the beautiful visuals to your thoughtful text and narration, it all comes together extremely well. It deserves as many views as there are stars in the Milky Way galaxy. Please keep up the good work. I can't wait to see your next episode.

    • @reasonerenlightened2456
      @reasonerenlightened2456 Год назад +1

      if the radius from now to the beginning of the observable Universe is 13.8 then how come the radius is 46 in one direction? Non-sensical?

    • @Dan-zq5wt
      @Dan-zq5wt Год назад +3

      I agree! Incredible and very well explained!

    • @Dan-zq5wt
      @Dan-zq5wt Год назад +4

      @@reasonerenlightened2456 there’s a video out there that explains this. I think the answer is based on the rate of expansion relative to the time it takes for the light of different structures to reach us. I think

    • @kloboklonz9589
      @kloboklonz9589 Год назад +14

      @@reasonerenlightened2456 I explain it to you: What you see now in deepest reaches of space is the result of light, that was sent 13.8 billion years ago. And so what you see now, is the status quo as it was 13.8 billion years BEFORE now. But in the meanwhile (during those 13.8 billion years) the REAL expanse of the universe has grown to a radius 46 billion lightyears. And so what you perceive as 13.8 billion lightyears away is indeed 46 billion lightyears away.

    • @danielhansell7623
      @danielhansell7623 Год назад +1

      @@reasonerenlightened2456😢😢w

  • @christopherjbarclay522
    @christopherjbarclay522 Год назад +96

    Gah that was an insanely epic video. It's 3:45AM and the time I spent watching felt like a trance, I didn't realize I was tired until I finished. Thank you for the awesome experience, Jon Farrow!

  • @charlesmiller1446
    @charlesmiller1446 Год назад +1

    So Very Excellent Series !
    Ranks above and beyond Sagan's Cosmos, a no small feat !!!
    Thank You So Much.

  • @emanuelosorio9610
    @emanuelosorio9610 Год назад

    09:38 I love the nostalgic piano music, as if it were video montage of parents recording their baby's early growth.

  • @pranjalibhattacharjee1121
    @pranjalibhattacharjee1121 Год назад +201

    I am currently just speechless. The research, narration and knowledge packed in this video is mesmerizing! The amount of depth this video held, yet pertaining to the simplicity to catch the eye of the general audience is extremely commendable! Thank you for this. It has further heightened my curiosity to understand the Universe!

    • @pranjalibhattacharjee1121
      @pranjalibhattacharjee1121 Год назад +7

      @@trannystomper88 What does that even have to do with whatever I said! Also, probably correct your own English first. Its supposed to be "you're" or "you are". There is no such word as "ur" in the English dictionary.

    • @chriswaudby1084
      @chriswaudby1084 10 месяцев назад

      It's just what these guys do enjoy😊

    • @blokin5039
      @blokin5039 7 месяцев назад

      @@pranjalibhattacharjee1121 Fake news about you!!!

  • @dannonmarinade
    @dannonmarinade Год назад +55

    This series of videos is without a doubt my favorite thing on RUclips. Thank you for the consistently awe-inspiring content.

  • @dziban303
    @dziban303 11 месяцев назад +9

    The effect of BAO are so profound that it's a shame it isn't discussed more widely in popsci and outreach. If it's mentioned at all, it goes about a millimeter deep. Meanwhile, this video did a very good job of wading into the concept further while remaining accessible to the general public. Cheers

    • @dreimalnein22
      @dreimalnein22 7 месяцев назад

      Yesss, so right, but also I think the wider public should be made aware of the work of professor Subir Sarkar from Oxford regarding dark energy and the origins of the measurements that led to the nobel price for its "proof"
      We can very well be still special observers on a scale we can't see behind the CMB horizon in a even bigger universe.

  • @Aliskandr
    @Aliskandr Год назад +2

    Awesome and this presentation is utterly astounding… You’ve explained stuff I’ve only barely understood, and I thank you for that.

  • @adram3lech
    @adram3lech Год назад +13

    All my life I've been hearing and actively exposing myself to information about CMB and this is the first time I found out that the heat difference is at a scale of 1/100,000. Thank you.

  • @SIKCAR
    @SIKCAR Год назад +56

    YES, finally a new episode. I've been watching all the past episodes countless times every single night going to sleep.
    The content is so amazing and interesting that other science docu don't cover. Yet the voice and narration is so soothing that makes it easy to fall asleep to.

    • @ggrthemostgodless8713
      @ggrthemostgodless8713 Год назад +2

      Agree with you... the right voice for this type of content. Like they thought well about the fact that not all listeners would be English speaking. Many other channels don't seem to think about it, speaking super fast, with regional slangs, and some English accents not well understood by even other English speakers.

  • @farazshin6952
    @farazshin6952 Год назад +2

    On my 9 years of RUclips content consumption I have to say this is my absolute favourite video by a margin, thank you!

  • @paullbobbinsbobbins2965
    @paullbobbinsbobbins2965 Год назад

    The all just gets more and more intriguing and wonderfull, i never thought as an eight year old looking at the stars it would go on to be so mind blowing.

  • @deusexaethera
    @deusexaethera Год назад +40

    It's taken me years of reading to learn the stuff you explain in the course of a 45 minute video. I continue to be amazed by how effectively you pack so much information into such a short time while also keeping it in the correct order for proper comprehension.

  • @scpdatabase969
    @scpdatabase969 Год назад +89

    You present this content like my philosophy of science professor used to. It’s amazing.
    The ability to explain physics to laymen while keeping things interesting with history and interesting stories. Love this channel and the others from its creators :)

  • @jamprosteve
    @jamprosteve Год назад +1

    Thank you for your amazing work and outstanding quality of video and narration.

  • @HAL-xy3om
    @HAL-xy3om Год назад +1

    Fantastic show as always ! Thank you.

  • @billc.4584
    @billc.4584 Год назад +44

    Truth: I am a cosmology junkie. I eat this subject up with a spoon so I don't miss a drop. Loving your channel. I typically have to watch each episode at least twice (not a problem) because they are so information dense (that's a good thing) with a welcome specificity. Many chicken out when it comes to putting a number on some things and rely on 'really really big'. Oh, and I haven't caught you (yet) saying 'millions' instead of 'billions' (trust me, that's a thing). Thank you. I hope I made you smile. Peace.

    • @theultimatereductionist7592
      @theultimatereductionist7592 Год назад +2

      Watch Professor Dave Explains channel. THE BEST!

    • @youtubeisB0ring
      @youtubeisB0ring Год назад

      ok ! can u answer me sir , how our scinetis knows how our milyway look?even tho none of man made thing have went that far

    • @longwaydown6959
      @longwaydown6959 Год назад +3

      So I'm not sure If English just isn't your first language, you're rather young, or typing short hand on a mobile device's digital keyboard and that's why the spelling and grammar in your question isn't the best. But no judgment on that from me, the way I type is not perfect either.
      So, we have launched the Voyager Probe, which we are still communicating with and if you look up some of the photos from the probe, you can see the sheer magnitude of the distance it has covered and although it doesn't allow us to see the full scope of what it looks like EXACTLY, it is still impressive nonetheless.
      Secondly, we do have telescopes which have given us a pretty deep perspective when it comes to what we've been able to see and measure. The creator of this video has also mentioned the multiple device's, Scans and Surveys we've used in order to get a visual perspective on the form and shape our universe takes. One of the issues mentioned is the "End of Greatness" issue. We can only see visible light to a certain extent. As a result of the universal speed limit of Light, the further we look in distance, the older the age of where we are looking. So, with the other issue of the " Horizon Problem" he mentioned, it can have an almost haze of uniformity, but, with the theory of Inflation, we can essentially infer as to what the shape of our Universe, Cosmos, Galaxy, Solar System, etc. To a pretty close approximation as to the example given in the video.
      I do hope my rambling response (which mind you, I only understand much of these concepts at a surface level) has given you some insight as it pertains to your original question. Always stay curious, always keep your mind open to new information while also debating that information until you're able to get either an informed theory or opinion, or you're able to get facts and continue to build your knowledge off of those facts. 😁😁

    • @billc.4584
      @billc.4584 Год назад

      @@youtubeisB0ring Hey, as The Ultimate Reductionist mentioned above "Professor Dave Explains" is a great channel for the novice. You asked a great question: how can we 'know' from our perspective what the Milky Way looks like? Short answer is: we can't. Not precisely.
      What astronomers can do is map out points (stars, nebula etc.) relative to the Earth and work from there. From those now known points they work out a star population density map and these suggest that the Milky Way is a barred spiral galaxy subject to new information. Keep in mind that our own central galatic bulge obscures a huge portion of our own galaxy from us. Then they can look at other barred spiral galaxies and get a pretty fair idea of what ours looks like but not an exact representation.
      The scale of the observable universe (93 billion l.y.) and even just our galaxy (100,000 to 120,000 l.y) can be staggering but understanding what we know so far is tremendously rewarding if not hugely humbling. I hope that you pursue your interest in the subject. Peace.

    • @dnet4006
      @dnet4006 4 месяца назад

      You can actually see it in the night sky if it's clear and dark enough. If you look at what other galaxies look like, you can deduct what our galaxy should look like.

  • @zeno3114
    @zeno3114 Год назад +80

    You deserve to be on millions of subscribers for the work you put into this channel

    • @KGB.83
      @KGB.83 Год назад

      Like the history channel..lol

  • @TheArchitect93
    @TheArchitect93 11 месяцев назад

    Might have to rewatch this a few times. Never would I have thought I'd get so much information condensed into 45 minutes but otherwise summarised almost the entire history up to now of astrological observations. God met it's match. And the game is still playing out.

  • @vv13346
    @vv13346 Год назад +2

    Would have liked to see a brief explanation of the CMB angular power spectrum and its relationship between BAOs and dark matter over/under densities in the early universe and large scale structure today.

  • @TheMunchkinita2509
    @TheMunchkinita2509 Год назад +160

    Interesting how the universe at one point kinda looks like a tree. Reminds me of Yggdrasill, the tree from Norse mythology. It was believed to be the world tree, a giant ash supporting the universe. Pretty cool coincidence, if you ask me.

    • @dieterjoseph8569
      @dieterjoseph8569 Год назад +15

      That’s no coincidence!

    • @jesseyu69420
      @jesseyu69420 Год назад +20

      @@dieterjoseph8569 But Norse mythology was created by humans. What are the odds humans made up stories about how the universe works and they turned out to be true?

    • @theresnothinghereatall
      @theresnothinghereatall Год назад +19

      @@jesseyu69420 High. It's easy to make things up, enough times and it'll eventually be accurate

    • @TheMunchkinita2509
      @TheMunchkinita2509 Год назад +13

      @@theresnothinghereatall it being a highly probable occurrence doesn't change the fact that it's still a coincidence.

    • @mybuddyet
      @mybuddyet Год назад +15

      Or is it just our choice to see things in understandable structures that sees a tree where none exists, kinda like seeing faces in shadows or clouds?

  • @GodfatherXXI
    @GodfatherXXI Год назад +47

    Thank you for these series of masterpieces!

  • @TEJR69
    @TEJR69 Год назад

    Right now, I'm at work.
    I work as a guard of a fairly large area, I personaly do only nightshifts mainly because I worked in a hotel for a good portion of my life and I just can't stand people at work.
    Anyway, being in this huge area, for 12 hours per Shift, sometimes having 5 shifts in a row can get a bit ... well overwhelming.
    One moment you are sipping your favorite tea, the very next moment you see couple of teenagers climbing the fence and right when you get them out, 3,5km away, across the whole area an alarm starts blasting so you need to check it out.
    Many people can't take this job, mainly the nightshifts, because how scary ot can get sometimes. Yet I find it unbelievably peaceful. If nothing is happening I love to take walks around the area and I always find myself staring at the stars and watching the night sky.
    It made me so interested in the cosmos so bad I even bought a telescope, which I bring to work and I just look around and make notes, draw anything I see.
    Sure, I'll never find anything new or something revolutionary, I don't want to anyway, I'll leave that to the smarter and better equipped lads.
    But since I was a small small kid, I always viewed the cosmos as the biggest scary thing imaginable.
    The sheer thought how little we are compared to the space is iust something that left me sleepless more then I'd like to admit.
    Milkyway galaxy and Andromeda galaxy crashing into each other, Sun eventually destroying Earth ... just these two events, that might be BILLIONS of years away from us, just haunts me.
    It's THE end, nothing else, all the humanity gone, all the stories of humankind, all good and bad just erased from existence.
    It makes me feel like I'd wake up the next morning and nobody knows what we did yesterday although we can still move forward and somehow get to know what we did yesterday.
    When any of those two events mentioned before happen, there is nothing.
    I can't even describe how anxious it is for me even writing this down.
    Somehow this topic can make me freeze in thoughts for HOURS.
    Yet with ANYTHING else I look at everything logicaly and quite frankly I'm a huge ignorant with most things.
    If I take a night walk here and hear some rustle around the corner?
    I instantly think of 2 things.
    a) Wild Animal
    b) Human
    I turn on my flashlight and go see what it is.
    99% of the time It's just a Deer, Fox, Marten or a cat.
    People are dumb enough to get spotted on camera way before they even get close to the fence.
    BUT, in situations like these I don't feel fear, I don't have the need of thinking over it at all, I just hear, shine light, go, shoo away the animal (if Its anything other than a cat, I'd do anything for a cat) yet when I think about the space, our universe, how god damn random all of the creation ON this Earth and OF this Earth is.
    Just a bunch of particles build up, create elements like water, oxygen, carbon, these things for little tiny organisms that somehow get bigger and bigger, now they grew a limb or two, now they build stuff, now they refine the elements all around them and soon enough we will start having sex with robots and whatever else is planned for us.
    It's just super crazy we are even here.
    We are intelligent enough to understand the scope of the cosmos.
    We have phones to see videos like this and be able to connect with each other via the comments here or just by calling...
    And all of this will some day be just gone.
    No reverse, no reload, no "back to the lobby", nothing.
    It's just overwhelming for me to a point I just can't think of anything that will soothe my mind.
    Sure neither you or I will get to that point, not our children and even their children.
    Not even children of their children and children of their children.
    Yet it STILL makes me feel uneasy.
    More than anything.
    I can shoo away a big wild animal.
    I can see a horrible accident on the road.
    I can loose someone dear to me.
    Yet I can't bring myself to compose myself when I think of the god damn space.
    Truly a bane of my existence that thought is.

  • @martinstubs6203
    @martinstubs6203 10 месяцев назад +1

    Fun fact: Kopernikus' real name was Niklas Koppernigk, which he latinized to Nikolaus Kopernikus as was a custom for scholars of the day.

  • @daniellassander
    @daniellassander Год назад +16

    I freaking love your videos, the production value is through the roof. The amount of relevant information is packed in tight with amazing visuals and with an amazing narrator, and you dont shy away from questions we dont have an answer to.

  • @idiotequedwaal
    @idiotequedwaal Год назад +31

    Just wanted to drop a comment. Really. It's the least I can do for a channel that is such a massive source of terrific content. Never stop. Thank you.

  • @emoji_page
    @emoji_page 5 месяцев назад +1

    If you could travel fast enough to leave the entire stellar universe and looked back at it from a long distance away, the universe would look like a star. A bright point of light in the vast darkness of ancient pre-existing space time that our stellar universe is encompassed within. ✨️

  • @bigbaIIs
    @bigbaIIs Год назад +5

    THE ELDEN BEAST

  • @renendell
    @renendell Год назад +18

    This was beautiful and without a doubt my favorite episode so far. Thank you for all that you do.

  • @RedNomster
    @RedNomster Год назад +9

    37:42 It's not a big issue, but protons and neutrons are composite particles, not elementary particles (quarks, electrons, etc - particles that don't have building blocks)

    • @sadievonfange9529
      @sadievonfange9529 Год назад

      There aren't any light waves short enough to get an image of anything smaller, that the human eye can still see.

    • @ea9988
      @ea9988 Год назад

      *that we know of

  • @stevemenghini8226
    @stevemenghini8226 Год назад

    Wonderful, thank you. Well done. Perspective is enlightening.

  • @patriciajob7829
    @patriciajob7829 10 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for sharing such a good quality knowledge. With you, I'm still learning with joy at 61 years old. Thank you univers too ! 😊

  • @ynkybomber
    @ynkybomber Год назад +46

    Imagine if the void is actually a Dyson capable civilization

    • @zancre1079
      @zancre1079 Год назад +7

      thats what its said to be

    • @since_win_sins
      @since_win_sins Год назад +1

      Forget stars they takin' up whole galaxies up their arse ☠️

    • @somethingsomething7993
      @somethingsomething7993 Год назад

      But the sphere covered the entire galaxy..

    • @BringDHouseDown
      @BringDHouseDown Год назад +6

      @@somethingsomething7993 no it would be the individual stars being covered, not a sphere covering the whole galaxy that's just so inefficient and impractical. Some galaxies still have stars, 60 of them, perhaps uninhabited by them, or perhaps those are the ones they live in since they have sunlight and they used the other galaxies to cover up their stars and absorb their energy...............fuck that's actually messed up now that I think about it...pick and choose which galaxies will have life and the rest can kiss life goodbye cause they covered up all their stars, and with such a large area of thousands of galaxies or hundreds(idk) which is a lot, this must be ...well a population of a single species or federation/covenant of many that must number in just absurd amounts if they need this much power/energy, the astronomical amounts of energy at their disposal, their technology to do all this, how long they must of existed to make this possible, I wonder how massive their fleets are...would they count their ships in the trillions while we count them on Earth in the thousands?
      The power scales are too messed up, newer civilizations don't have a chance against them, the Reapers of Mass Effect were right, PLS NERF

    • @AngryKittens
      @AngryKittens Год назад +1

      And the attractors are galaxy-devouring runaway nanite superweapons.

  • @happyfuntimereviews5600
    @happyfuntimereviews5600 Год назад +5

    This has grown into one of my favorite channels.
    Thank you for the continually excellent content.

  • @Aalvye
    @Aalvye 5 месяцев назад +3

    Reality as it presents itself to us is something truly special! What wows me just as much is the humans contemplating existence and having figured out or theorized...all of this.

  • @DeltaCodeGames
    @DeltaCodeGames 3 месяца назад +1

    41:54 - Excellent visual! Thanks.

  • @daveo1002
    @daveo1002 Год назад +7

    This was a fascinating video! Thank you so much for gathering the research, and compiling it into a very comprehensive and understandable piece. The graphics help explain your points and tell the story succinctly. The manner in which you speak, has a bit of wonder to it, keeps my attention, and makes me curious about what you will be explaining next. This was truly an amazing piece of educational fulfillment. Thank you for this!

  • @shaggydudegaming
    @shaggydudegaming Год назад

    That four minute intro is probably the best intro to any video I have ever seen

  • @justtdg5723
    @justtdg5723 Год назад +85

    We’re inside of something living, like our universe is one of its cells

    • @anthonyryan6208
      @anthonyryan6208 Год назад +23

      @@user-d3cdfeef saying the universe is a star seems reductive of what the universe is and what a star is

    • @babysquirrelxxoo8136
      @babysquirrelxxoo8136 Год назад +7

      i have a friend who’s thoroughly convinced of this lol. it does look like it.

    • @khaliddubey8652
      @khaliddubey8652 Год назад +9

      I agree. As below so above etc etc. We're majorly bacteria but are unaware of them why not the same thing on cosmic scales?

    • @BringDHouseDown
      @BringDHouseDown Год назад +3

      It better not be a Flying Spaghetti Monster

    • @hansmatos2504
      @hansmatos2504 Год назад

      ​@@BringDHouseDown it's a giant elf instead

  • @jlwilder8436
    @jlwilder8436 Год назад +21

    That was really great!
    I didn't know what to expect (as some of the channels that do space videos are quite a let down) but this was so well done and enjoyable! 👏 👏
    In fact, too short! 😄
    I just subscribed!

  • @heartsalive3157
    @heartsalive3157 11 месяцев назад +4

    I literally can't think of anything more special than being created by the universe to observe the universe in this inconceivable small yet detailed corners

  • @ksalarang
    @ksalarang Год назад

    I've grown bored of cosmos films like this one or so I thought. 46 minutes passed by unnoticed. I'm amazed by the grand scheme of the universe yet again. Thank you.

  • @DumbBaby
    @DumbBaby Год назад +5

    I adore this footage, I have a very cheap projector but the images still come out quite nicely, and some of the commentary is deeply philosophical, fantastic.

  • @marcusanthony9322
    @marcusanthony9322 Год назад +6

    Its really hard to picture such a grand scale in your head, this video helped me put it all in to perspective, thanks.

  • @HighMojo
    @HighMojo 6 месяцев назад

    The large scale structure of the universe reminds me of a magnetic dipole. The field lines emanate from one pole and absorbed through the other end manifesting itself as a manifold in the form of a torus.
    The universe is a hyper Horn torus, with one side of the hole being the Dipole Repeller, and the opposite side being the Shapley Attractor, linked via a wormhole.

  • @octaviodigianni905
    @octaviodigianni905 Год назад +5

    this is one of the best documentaries i've ever seen and I cant belive it's free on youtube. Honestly thank you, it's just mindblowing. Im still processing!

  • @ivanchu8415
    @ivanchu8415 Год назад +19

    The fact that there is something out there that light itself takes a billion years to reach is just unbelievably revealing of the ridiculous size of the universe itself. And even then it keeps expanding, the mind really is not ready for this absurd revelation.

  • @dmlarry
    @dmlarry 4 месяца назад +1

    Lately I’ve been watching many physics and math series on RUclips, hopefully all this information can benefit me later

  • @craiglowensen5468
    @craiglowensen5468 Год назад

    Nice job! We´re getting there. I love this stuff!

  • @starbyray7828
    @starbyray7828 Год назад +3

    I absolutely love these videos and this channel. The best reason for youtube to exist. Ever since I can remember I have always wondered what is the universe, what is outside it, where did it all come from and above all WHY????
    This channel feeds that curiosity, poses new questions with every answer.......

  • @Jamiefearon
    @Jamiefearon Год назад +9

    Why this channel doesn’t have 8 billion subscribers is beyond my imagination.

    • @ccahill2322
      @ccahill2322 Год назад

      Jamie Fearon, But there are 8 billion bicycles in Beijing...according to Kathy Mellieu. 0r was it 8 million??

    • @msDanielp369
      @msDanielp369 Год назад

      then tell ur friends about and like vids u like to spread

  • @edtrillo1415
    @edtrillo1415 11 месяцев назад +1

    Wow an astronomy video written and narrated by an actual human without randomly generated ai video footage? Thank you 🙏🏼

  • @tinygriffy
    @tinygriffy 8 месяцев назад

    There is no movie I would watch as often as your videos .. good job !

  • @freyatilly
    @freyatilly Год назад +7

    Amazing how this has been put together, so well explained. Fabulous presentation.

  • @frogstamper
    @frogstamper Год назад +8

    Absolutely fascinating, what better way to round off a day than getting lost in the majesty and splendor of our universe, all beautifully presented and explained with such clarity from the narrator. ten out of ten sir.

  • @leonmitas
    @leonmitas 11 месяцев назад +5

    From the side of religion, David wrote:
    When I consider your heavens, the work of your fingers, the moon and the stars, which you have set in place,
    what is man that you are mindful of him, the son of man that you care for him?
    You made him a little lower than the heavenly beings and crowned him with glory and honour.
    David knew we were small and insignificant comparing to the world out there, and yet, we are the only part of it (at least as far as we know it) that enjoys it.

    • @rustythecrown9317
      @rustythecrown9317 11 месяцев назад +2

      from the side of intelligent thought we write; Your religion is ludicrous and has no real answers for not just astronomy , but everything in general.

    • @leonmitas
      @leonmitas 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@rustythecrown9317 can you please elaborate and explain to us, peasants what intelligence is?

    • @FriendwithNoName7
      @FriendwithNoName7 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@rustythecrown9317 Hey

    • @rustythecrown9317
      @rustythecrown9317 11 месяцев назад

      @@FriendwithNoName7 hey , what?.

    • @notreallythatenlightened
      @notreallythatenlightened 8 дней назад

      @@rustythecrown9317u wouldn’t think that a piece of complicated technology just came to be would u? Every single thing on earth, in the whole universe, works so meticulously perfectly together that it is completely reasonable to believe that there is a creator.

  • @joeharmon3301
    @joeharmon3301 Год назад

    That was so enjoyable! Thank you.

  • @gamingdragon5140
    @gamingdragon5140 Год назад +50

    anyone ever notice that the large scale universe resembles neural pathways?

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz Год назад +2

      Is the PanTheos superluminical?
      No need to reply, I don't think so.

    • @gamingdragon5140
      @gamingdragon5140 Год назад +3

      @@LuisAldamiz Pantheos? i was making an observation :/

    • @Conanmorlang
      @Conanmorlang Год назад +4

      Yup, a lot of ppl. Wierd huh?

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz Год назад +5

      @@gamingdragon5140 - If those are neural pathways, then the Universe should be a brain, right? Just making an observation myself... ;p

    • @gamingdragon5140
      @gamingdragon5140 Год назад +3

      @@LuisAldamiz coincidences are weird eh?

  • @lucianpopescu3896
    @lucianpopescu3896 Год назад +3

    Truly amazing documentary. Words cannot describe my awe at the beauty of narration and also the quality of reasoning....

  • @Aesyrbane
    @Aesyrbane Год назад

    this channel is cathartic as well as educational. thank you so much.

    • @timsytanker
      @timsytanker Год назад

      I can watch it to learn something new or listen to it to calm my mind and help me drift off to sleep.

  • @Arabicmanisfr
    @Arabicmanisfr Год назад +14

    Hello, Im a little late, but im 14 and im curious with the universe. Ive taught my self calculus, physics, etc. But two subjects that make me question is neuroscience and quantum physics. This video is way better than any video i've seen in months. Its really, really, really beautiful.

    • @grimsobad8545
      @grimsobad8545 Год назад +1

      Roblox or minecraft?

    • @Arabicmanisfr
      @Arabicmanisfr Год назад +3

      @@grimsobad8545 Neither. Dont play video games

    • @lordgemini2376
      @lordgemini2376 Год назад +2

      Keep studying, learn as much as you can!!!

    • @Arabicmanisfr
      @Arabicmanisfr Год назад +6

      @@lordgemini2376 Thank you, It will be needed! Hope the best for you as well!

    • @party4keeps28
      @party4keeps28 Год назад

      What is your primary language?

  • @DawnstealerGaming
    @DawnstealerGaming Год назад +8

    Not to get weird about it, but it kind of resembles the mucus net bathochordaeus charon throws around itself. One of the things I always found fascinating is that the further away it gets from us, the further back in time we're looking at - so anything we're observing that's millions or billions of light years away is how it looked THEN and not now.

  • @deeloogass
    @deeloogass Год назад +11

    Whoever does this music is a superhero. Fantastic content all around. Always excited to learn something new about our amazing universe. You are the voice in my head right before I fall asleep most nights. From the bottom of my heart and the depths of my mind, thank you.

  • @meganheyburn4026
    @meganheyburn4026 Год назад +2

    I really struggle to get my head around the universe, if the universe is expanding what is it expanding into and how big is that expanse? Could there be multiple universes in the great expanse and one day two universes will meet?

  • @Gyfrctgtdbhf
    @Gyfrctgtdbhf Год назад +1

    The first thought that entered my mind when seeing the thumbnail image was Yggdrasil the world tree from Norse mythology.

  • @mattpatterson3861
    @mattpatterson3861 Год назад +3

    Wow. Great video. Concise, thoroughly researched, and accurate information. Incredible writing. Just a superb job. Thank you.

  • @3000waterman
    @3000waterman Год назад +3

    Thank God for calm, RP English narration. No hype. No frenetic hyperbole. This is how to do it. Sub'd.

    • @NickanM
      @NickanM Год назад +1

      And no distracting loud music.

  • @party4keeps28
    @party4keeps28 Год назад

    This is really well done.

  • @waterwolf982
    @waterwolf982 Год назад +1

    I loved listening to this while doing laundry! This really helped by not being too distracting, but also not too boring. Just entertaining enough to balance it with a dreaded chore.

    • @doctorcrafts
      @doctorcrafts 10 месяцев назад

      Reading this comment was a dreaded chore

  • @charliekim2939
    @charliekim2939 Год назад +24

    Near the end I heard you saying "We don't know. Nobody does." Not knowing how it all began and evolved is becoming even more painful as I near my end of time. I am not good enough to figure them out myself. There are so-called standard models (of the Universe and elementary particles) but none is convincing -- like GR. Understanding means never having to mention some singularity or dark stuff. (Love Story?) And I am still looking for a true love of my life.

    • @semantica-james
      @semantica-james Год назад +2

      Focus on finding the true love -- that's the meaning of it all right there ;-)

    • @MrMD571
      @MrMD571 Год назад

      I recommend you read a 1450 years old book called " Quran" sent by the Creator, you'll find an interesting amount of Scientific verses calling humans and challenging their minds to wonder, ask, observe and investigate to reach the truth by reading !! Good luck.

    • @MrMD571
      @MrMD571 Год назад

      @@voidremoved You need to read carefully Sir..this topic is not about emotions, Its about finding the truth, Thats why I recommended Reading "Quran" the book that is the same book people read 1450 years ago unchanged،within it there is a lot of challenges to the mindes of Humans to answer if they're seeking the truth they shall easily find it.

    • @allhopeabandon7831
      @allhopeabandon7831 Год назад

      @@MrMD571 You mean The King James Bible...

    • @Tom-sd9jb
      @Tom-sd9jb Год назад

      God is one. Doesn't matter what religion you are or what angle you see it from. God can mean many things to many people but we'll all find out at some point, just probably not on this material plane.

  • @deejannemeiurffnicht1791
    @deejannemeiurffnicht1791 Год назад

    I had a giggle at the beginning. Why?
    It reminded me of Hitch Hikers Guide To The Galaxy when we were introduced to the Perspective Vortex when we realise what a speck of dust we are at grander scales. Except Zaphod Beeblbrox as he just saw how amazing he was.

  • @natemickens88
    @natemickens88 Год назад

    I feel like a tiny little genius because of what I now know. Thank You kindly Mr. Producer 👍🏾