A Shift in the Earth's Cycles Is Coming - How Will It Affect You?

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  • Опубликовано: 23 май 2024
  • Enjoy this Supercut of Earth Cycle Videos. Milankovitch cycles, El Nino, Polar Vortexes, Solar cycles and more. Thank you to all our lovely Astrumnauts on Patreon, you can still sign up today here: bit.ly/4aiJZNF
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    Patreon: bit.ly/4aiJZNF
    Credits:
    Writer: Jon McColgan
    Editor/Animator(s): Nathália Gardin / Pavel Slavin /Nikolai Shishkin / Suhith Sai
    Narrator: Alex McColgan
    Producer(s): Alex McColgan/ Raquel Taylor
    Thumbnail Design: Peter Sheppard
    #astrum #space #climatechange #environment #weather #solarsystem

Комментарии • 1,9 тыс.

  • @Spalato
    @Spalato 23 дня назад +929

    Are you serious? I was just browsing for a video to watch along my meal, refresh and what do I see? An almost 2 hour Astrum video posted a minute ago. Thanks man!
    Edit: What exactly in my comment makes disappointingly many people assume that I eat for 2 hours straight? You people do comprehend, that a video can be continued being watched after one has finished eating, no?

    • @MissAynneK
      @MissAynneK 23 дня назад +17

      Right? The timing is perfect!

    • @ewilliamson488
      @ewilliamson488 23 дня назад +8

      Having a late breakfast. 🥰

    • @GabrielSBarbaraS
      @GabrielSBarbaraS 23 дня назад

      Same here except 26 minutes ago.

    • @faenethlorhalien
      @faenethlorhalien 23 дня назад +2

      Be thankful it's not the like 24 hours video he posted last month. Heh...

    • @michahcc
      @michahcc 23 дня назад +2

      Eat up.

  • @Jude74
    @Jude74 23 дня назад +461

    My favorite way to go to sleep, gently lullabied by his lilting voice telling us of our future horrors. Yet it’s not nightmare fuel. That’s talent. He’s like the Bob Ross of science.

    • @rainbowbutterflyfan
      @rainbowbutterflyfan 23 дня назад +16

      You will love PBS space time then. Dr. Matt’s voice is like molasses

    • @avo616
      @avo616 22 дня назад +12

      Bob Ross made different and unique art. Not regurgitated information

    • @DemHighTimes
      @DemHighTimes 22 дня назад +1

      All science is regurgitated information

    • @m.vinn.r.3645
      @m.vinn.r.3645 22 дня назад +10

      ​@avo616 I believe the comparison has to deal with the mood , vibe that they both give out and put the audience in.

    • @paszmaty
      @paszmaty 22 дня назад

      I find it terrible for sleep, cause it's too interesting. I need to watch these multiples times for them to become proper lullabies later on.

  • @PsRohrbaugh
    @PsRohrbaugh 22 дня назад +159

    This is the best summarization of the climate I've seen. It's rare I see the solar cycle discussed to the point of nucleation sites. I wish you had discussed the long-term brightening of our sun (models vary, but scientists estimate the sun was 30% dimmer during the time of the dinosaurs than today), as well as vulcanism.
    Regardless, this is the most comprehensive video I've seen and I wish more people would see it. I know I'll be sharing it with people.

    • @astrumspace
      @astrumspace  12 дней назад +15

      Thank you for the kind words and for supporting the channel!

    • @VeggyZ
      @VeggyZ 10 дней назад +3

      Weren't there also really old stories that suggested at one point the earth was in perpetual twilight, and that something happened at some point in the distant past, that made the sun way brighter and hotter? I can't recall WHERE I heard that story, just that it had something to do with "the mystery schools" and some knowledge passed down within. Very interesting though - and something I find entirely plausible.

    • @baneverything5580
      @baneverything5580 9 дней назад +4

      For some reason the censors won`t allow me to type this number, but it`s FIVE-THIRTY-SIX, the year, and it was the beginning of a terrible period of suffering due to vulcanism. Sulphur compound spikes are present in ice at both poles. Today it would be far worse since we`re completely unprepared which is hard to believe. This relatively stable temperature period for the past 5000 years will abruptly end one day. Our corn, wheat, rice, beans and fruits won`t be able to be produced and livestock won`t be fed. And no preparations are in place to ease the fall. That isn`t very smart and it`s baffling.

    • @BrianWoodruff-Jr
      @BrianWoodruff-Jr 7 дней назад

      @@baneverything5580 536, did it work?

    • @user-ue5yw6zb9k
      @user-ue5yw6zb9k День назад

      ​@@baneverything5580wouldn't the sulfur indicate massive volcanic eruptions?

  • @kswis
    @kswis 22 дня назад +24

    I don't think I've ever learned more about weather in 2 hrs. If not for the all mighty astrum I'd have zoned out. Truly fascinating

  • @stevek9793
    @stevek9793 18 дней назад +14

    1816 The global "Year without summer (big freeze)" 3°C temperature drop and crop failures. April 1815, volcano Mount Tambora began to violently erupt. Millions of tons of ash, dust, and sulfur dioxide were released into the atmosphere, casting a temporary chill across the planet as it Blocked out the Sunlight for months on end. Documented around the world in literature.

    • @JustinStLouis-xz7ut
      @JustinStLouis-xz7ut 8 дней назад +1

      What goes up must come down!
      Our atmospheric filtration system is one of the best around!

  • @edwinlipton
    @edwinlipton 6 дней назад +13

    This narrator is so good at speach and oration, "I" actually look forward to learning.

  • @dinopso
    @dinopso 22 дня назад +94

    Dear Astrum team
    I want to congratulate you on this beautiful production of almost two hours on the discussion of global warming.
    The extensive scientific research that you addressed and delved into is simply brilliant.
    Bravo !!!
    I am a Geologist and yes, climate change is scary, but through this documentary, you manage to bring the true and essential substrate necessary for us to understand the relevance and responsibility of our role as human beings within this complex cycle that has governed our planet for more than 4 billion years.
    Continue to improve knowledge of astronomy and science in general with your videos.
    Once again, congratulations to everyone on the team and especially to you, Alex McColgan, for the wonderful work leading your Astrum.

    • @tetrasphere8165
      @tetrasphere8165 21 день назад +4

      It's not that scary

    • @Jude74
      @Jude74 18 дней назад +4

      @@tetrasphere8165 yeah it is. This last week has been unbelievable. It’s so frightening so many people have died so many people lost their homes. If you don’t think that’s frightening then you might be a sociopath.

    • @tetrasphere8165
      @tetrasphere8165 18 дней назад

      @@Jude74 I've worked for 4+ environmental groups but the fear is ridiculous. Being afraid of car farts and cow farts is silly. Respect the earth regardless and just keep in mind that on the day we get our so called footprint down to near zero, is the day a volcano blots out the sun. Also our technology will catch up before we have to start shitting our pants.

    • @MrSCAAT
      @MrSCAAT 17 дней назад +1

      I would bet my doctrate that you are not the sharpest pick in the case.

    • @mansoormannix1753
      @mansoormannix1753 10 дней назад

      Our planet was formed 4 billion years ago according to the new scientists carbon dated. But it took almost 3 billion to transform from big ball field with ocean of magma, slowly cooled down due to excessive CO², Sulphur Dioxide, emitted through the empty space filled with vacuum and push it while creating our atmosphere millions of average meteorite continue to bombard the earth from far solar system due to new created solar that introduce new gravitational energy. Our earth after covered with gases emitted from lava ball covered the earth surfaces and reduce the solar heat then our earth started cooling leaving behind solid compact but delicate mineral while the chemical reaction that gives the sun it's energy continue to burn and melting irons plate and leave stone behind to form the different types of solid spread crust. and the process never stopped till today. The earth have experience 3 ice age in 4 billion. Our earth still have another 2 billion years of enjoying life as it cycling around the sun.

  • @Blaze_0101
    @Blaze_0101 17 дней назад +35

    00:08 Earth's climate is governed by complex cycles.
    03:13 Earth's orbit and tilt influence temperature changes
    09:18 Earth's tilt and rotation influencing ice ages
    12:18 Earth's cycles, including Milankovitch cycles and El Niño Southern Oscillation, impact global temperatures and climate.
    18:27 Shifts in Pacific Jet Stream lead to global weather impacts
    21:35 La Niña shifts Earth's cycles with varied regional impacts
    27:36 Earth's atmospheric winds have complex polar vortexes
    30:39 Coriolis force redirects winds to create jet streams.
    36:27 Sudden Stratospheric Warming can lead to significant jet stream reversals.
    39:29 Imbalances in global temperatures lead to Jetstream shifts.
    45:26 Earth's core acts as a giant dynamo
    48:25 The Earth's magnetic field is precarious and constantly fluctuating.
    54:33 Earth's magnetic field weakening and the potential impact on society
    57:23 The Sun's cycles may significantly impact life on Earth
    1:03:26 The Sun's cycle mystery and its impact on Earth
    1:06:20 Geomagnetic storms affect technology and ecosystems
    1:12:08 The Earth is facing a shift in the Moon's cycles.
    1:15:11 Lunar nodes influence tidal extremes
    1:21:04 Lunar nodal cycle affects mangrove canopy cover
    1:23:58 Polders, dams, and sand dunes protect against water
    1:25:51 Global warming is causing unexpected changes on Earth.
    1:28:46 Understanding past global temperatures through ice core and Foraminifera analysis.
    1:34:47 Rapid rise in global temperatures is concerning due to its quick pace.
    1:37:53 Human activity is significantly impacting global temperatures through greenhouse gas emissions.
    1:44:26 Impact of global temperature change on species survival
    1:47:30 Climate change is happening rapidly, and we need fundamental changes to stop it.
    Crafted by AI ?

    • @Skyymon
      @Skyymon 13 дней назад +4

      this video feels very natural and quite well written, plus this channel has been producing videos on a similar quality for years, so despite the growth of AI in the past year, i really doubt it

    • @MrWeedWacky
      @MrWeedWacky 13 дней назад

      @@Skyymon don't bother, conspiracy nuts will conspiracy.

    • @Gotprivacy-noyoudont
      @Gotprivacy-noyoudont 11 дней назад +4

      No thank you ( as a blanket solution). We need some transparency as to what is already being manipulated, by who and why. No the real why!

    • @awethinic8379
      @awethinic8379 10 дней назад

      Let me help you to look at it differently. One volcano eruption is equal to all human influences for one year. So if the solar magnetic energy is being absorbed in the earths core that causes more volcanic activity and we get 4-5 more per year one can understand the co2 rise. Imho climate change is real but humanity isn’t as big as a factor as the globalist claim. The globalist have used cc to give them authority. They have plans to control every aspect of your life. 15 minute cities, control food supply, digital money that can be controlled. Eventually they will require you join the system or die. They will require you to worship them. A global money, a global government, a global religion. And eventually a chip underneath your skin that can control your money, your health, and eventually your thoughts. Transhumanism. They have told us the future and most on here will call me a conspiracy theorist. Most ignore the facts that de population has already begun. Put your trust in the creator. Read more. Find the truth. Cc is real but the globalist are using it to bring in globalism. I suggest following a RUclips channel called suspicious observers. He reports on cc and many studies that don’t get public attention. Peace to all and love each other.

    • @mansoormannix1753
      @mansoormannix1753 10 дней назад

      ​@@Gotprivacy-noyoudontwhy do people believe someone very powerful can alter and manipulate the nature? The only power so powerful that can alter the natural process of our earth is the same force that commanded all the energy to act together colliding on each other to cause friction to ignite highly explosive energy that left debris burning Ashes and gases into the space and everything works precisely to form what we see today. Only that power can command the same forces not to work again. The biggest thing we human can build to life on earth is nuclear and hydrogen bombs. 😂😂😂

  • @Milanagravat01
    @Milanagravat01 23 дня назад +69

    Watching from Rajasthan
    Todays Temperature was 47.8 ‘Celsius

    • @justinjones5281
      @justinjones5281 23 дня назад +4

      Dude!!!! Do you have underground lifestyles? Wild

    • @peterbreis5407
      @peterbreis5407 21 день назад +11

      What's extra frightening is that such a huge proportion of the world's population, and still growing, is living right in the path of that temperature increase.

    • @peterbreis5407
      @peterbreis5407 21 день назад +8

      @@justinjones5281 "Just turn on the air conditioning!"
      The idiot response I used to get from architects back in the '70s in response to clearly badly designed major buildings.

    • @pulsar22
      @pulsar22 20 дней назад +2

      @@peterbreis5407 "... huge proportion of the world's population, and still growing, is living right in the path of that temperature increase."
      That should tell you that humans like the warmth and not the cold.

    • @garyk1334
      @garyk1334 20 дней назад +9

      ​@@pulsar22Not the kind of warmth that kills you though which is what's happening in india & asia right now & it's come early too

  • @benmcreynolds8581
    @benmcreynolds8581 23 дня назад +49

    The more I've learned about our power grid & our climate, the more i realize that modern nuclear energy is our best option. LFTRs, Thorium Reactors, molten salt reactors, etc. Utilizing our advanced technology, Improved engineering & material science. Utilizing our greater understanding of safety & well made designs. We have so much more advanced computer technology & robotics that can be used. It feels like even tho tons of advancement has occurred with engineering designs, safety measures, etc. It still doesn't matter to most people. It's like most people are ingrained with a natural negative response when talking about nuclear energy. It's a bummer because i truly believe that our best option for our future is to start utilizing Modern advanced nuclear energy options in our electrical grid. It's just proving to be challenging to get politicians to get on board.
    It will really allow places to be much more energy independent. Less reliant on fossil fuels. They'll have efficient, stable electrical grids and the rest of the grid could experiment with alternative power sources, power desalination plants, etc.
    We need to heal from the trauma of our past. See & learn that those things only happened solely from Us not understanding what we were doing when it came to nuclear energy at the time. We didn't have advanced enough technology, material science, engineering, safety measures, understanding of how to go about everything, etc. This source of energy will greatly help the world improve towards the future and lowering emissions. More than anything else could, while also providing a very stable electrical grid system. Currently we have alternative energy options but the majority of our grid is powered off of fossil fuels and emission producing sources of energy. We will be so much better going forward commiting to modern advanced nuclear energy options.
    It's been very irritating that our society has taken this "Change is up to you" approach. It just takes advantage of people's emotions. This climate issue is so much bigger than any one individual. This needs to be an across the board kind of thing. That's the only way we might make the Slightest difference. We've already waited too long. Everyday is a day wasted. A day where we haven't committed to modern nuclear energy options. Where we haven't even started building it. It should be utilized in collaboration with other alternative energy sources all over the place. This power source is the best option to improve our environment & will really help lower our emissions. The only thing holding us back is legislation, fear mongering & past trauma that's affected us from our past failures (which is understandable but I know we can do better now. We've learned so much sense then. We gotta give it a shot. It's such a beneficial energy source when done right)
    Did they outlaw electricity, oil, natural gas or coal when things went wrong in the early days of those fields? No! They kept going and understood things usually are bumpy and difficult in the beginning and kept going even tho those sources negatively impacted our environment. A huge issue is our government is BLOCKING any sort of progression from happening. Will be lucky to see the slightest projects approved or finished with-in the next 100 years.. It's very annoying to see how much we have gotten in our own way when it comes to improving or advancing certain things. Instead we let fear, money, man made "required legal processes" Stop us from doing anything other than wind, solar, oil, natural gas, damming our rivers, mining for minerals... It's very frustrating because we should be able to use all these options in collaboration. If we actually wanted to improve anything. That's what we need to do and stop letting so much potential get blocked from ever occurring in the first place.. It's really irritating. I wish certain people didn't make this so "complicated and difficult" Why would any reasonable person want to block progression?

    • @JF-4444
      @JF-4444 23 дня назад

      Because they are making billions selling oil...

    • @TheBcoolGuy
      @TheBcoolGuy 22 дня назад +3

      There are some good thoughts in here. Something for you to consider: What parts of this are driven by your own emotions, and what emotions are they?

    • @JohnBickner
      @JohnBickner 22 дня назад

      Over time science and business have come up with ever-increasing ways of being stupid and greedy. We have had: lead pigmented paint, leaded gasoline, dioxin from imperfect manufacturing, phthalate in plastic, asbestos, etc etc Microplastics may be killing us all. Without regulations we'd all be dead by now and most birds would be extinct

    • @dogsbecute
      @dogsbecute 22 дня назад +9

      @@TheBcoolGuy are you implying his initial point that we should utilize nuclear is moot because the rest of his post is full of idealism and the realization of how fucked the world is? Strip the discussion of emotions, and look at it pragmatically, and nuclear is the much better option. ANd im not talking about those reactors built in the 50's. Im talking current designs like OP mentioned. Breeder reactors are undeniably one of the best ways to generate energy, with minimal human input, and tiny carbon footprint. Its about as automated as you can get with energy generation, hence why nuclear is so damn cheap. Not to mention, the literal only waste is STEAM. Coal is also more radioactive than even current nuclear reactors, which is WILD to me, considering the biggest argument against nuclear is the radiation.

    • @stevemarshall3986
      @stevemarshall3986 22 дня назад +3

      Please keep comments to one or two sentences. Geez.

  • @johannageisel5390
    @johannageisel5390 23 дня назад +24

    Great video, thank you!
    I knew about the existence of many of these cycles, but it is nice to see them all compiled in one work and also described in such depth.

    • @rcchristian2
      @rcchristian2 22 дня назад +2

      I was thinking the same thing. I knew about literally everything in the video, but he goes into so much more detail... the devil is in the details... :) This was done quite well! I was going to post the same thing you did.. lol but you beat me to it :)

  • @ericwood1942
    @ericwood1942 10 дней назад +5

    Solar cycles also affect the polar vortex. Solar maximums put more energy into the atmosphere causing increases in the variability of the polar vortexes. At solar minimums the polar vortexes are basically circular.
    Solar cycles have also been linked to the magnetic connections between the earth and saturn.
    Magnetic connections between the sun and planets is at least as important as the gravitaional connections.
    Also affecting the heliosphere is the cyclical connections with galactic influences.
    Good job. Well put together discusion.

    • @user-ue5yw6zb9k
      @user-ue5yw6zb9k День назад

      Some would say gravity & magnetism are one in the same.

  • @arthurbenderpereira2818
    @arthurbenderpereira2818 23 дня назад +60

    I live in Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil, we are experiencing an extreme Flood even bigger than the one in Peru like you showed, and it was partially because of the El Niño as well, the power of the elements in our earth are insurmoutable, we can't really predict or overcome them right now, and yet we influence it so much

    • @DuckDodgers69
      @DuckDodgers69 22 дня назад +1

      Things that make you go hmmmmmm

    • @TheBrazilianHue
      @TheBrazilianHue 22 дня назад +3

      É terrível o que estamos vivendo aqui. Sem precedentes na história e, mesmo assim, nem mesmo outros brasileiros parecem entender a dimensão do desastre.

    • @SacredOwl
      @SacredOwl 22 дня назад

      The cosmic rays coming through the souther anomaly could be creating more rain, I have read that cosmic rays couse cloud nucleation; not sure how stronge the evidence is though.

    • @gcburns4
      @gcburns4 22 дня назад +6

      Grass is taking over the earth. These days it seems like I have to mow every single week, if not twice sometimes. I'm consumed by my ideology of the rise of grass.

    • @seditt5146
      @seditt5146 22 дня назад +18

      Do we influence is so much though? Man covers almost none of the Earth. Our Energy usage and output is not even near even that of a mid size storm yet our Egos leave us to believe its all our fault. Its literally Tea leaves for modern man. Looking for meaning in any place we can for that we cant control or understand.

  • @Yurivlc
    @Yurivlc 23 дня назад +13

    Thank you once again, Alex. Your documentaries are excellent and so instructive. They always bring us good information.

  • @mangemongen
    @mangemongen 22 дня назад +65

    I just love how Astrum pronounces ”earth”. It’s like ”örth”, the sound that the Swedish letter ö makes, if a bit more nasal.

    • @craigknight2764
      @craigknight2764 22 дня назад +6

      It's a south Welsh vowel sound I believe

    • @danielvonbose557
      @danielvonbose557 15 дней назад +4

      Sometime I hear accents so pronounced they sound like a foreign language. No such problem here, I can understand nearly every accent originating from the British isles.

    • @bakedkoala9827
      @bakedkoala9827 14 дней назад

      So he pronounces wrong then

    • @jimwilson946
      @jimwilson946 14 дней назад +1

      No he pronounces it correctly for his part of Britain.

    • @tuberroot1112
      @tuberroot1112 11 дней назад

      @@jimwilson946 He has a very annoyingly affected accent. I've never quite worked out what kind of accent he is trying to suppress. I thought he was Irish but does sound it.

  • @elkecacib9606
    @elkecacib9606 15 часов назад

    Amazing video! Had to watch it in parts because it is so long, but did'nt want to miss anything. Thank you for researching all the facts for us and let us know cleary what is assumption and opinion, and what is not. Favorite part was 'Context is important'!

  • @ermpson5799
    @ermpson5799 23 дня назад +18

    Thank you for assembling all this information in such a clear and informative way. Well done!

  • @MyKharli
    @MyKharli 17 дней назад +8

    So in 10 or so years a spring tide with an onshore storm surge will deffo break records in loads of places .

  • @nuna1306
    @nuna1306 20 дней назад +1

    Love the vid! These long ones really get me chilled out. I wondered if you'd do a video about the giant solar flairs we've recently had, showing the arura. Seeing one from the UK was pretty amazing. I would love to understand what the solar flairs are, what they mean and the effects they have on us and space around us.

  • @Jason_AstroNovice
    @Jason_AstroNovice 22 дня назад +2

    Amazing job! One of your best videos yet!!! Thank you!!!

  • @mariz2361
    @mariz2361 23 дня назад +65

    You're a brave man!!! I'm gonna have to watch this again in a few days and see what comments you get........

    • @rickyfitness252
      @rickyfitness252 23 дня назад +25

      Florida was supposed to be underwater 10 years ago

    • @ermpson5799
      @ermpson5799 23 дня назад +3

      @@rickyfitness252 Thank goodness it's not. The wildfires have been worse than expected unfortunately.

    • @crabbyr6929
      @crabbyr6929 23 дня назад +11

      @@ermpson5799 expected? sounds like modelling.....

    • @FutureFoliageFF
      @FutureFoliageFF 23 дня назад

      ​@@crabbyr6929trees aren't even real

    • @rickyfitness252
      @rickyfitness252 23 дня назад +20

      @@ermpson5799 oh no! The regular recurring natural wildfires that were worse because of bad mismanagement by the government of Canada were worse than normal. The sky is falling. The sky is falling. The sky is falling

  • @rudolfsykora3505
    @rudolfsykora3505 23 дня назад +50

    Glad you made finally this video. I think its gonna be very mind opening for many people

    • @raheemabdul1066
      @raheemabdul1066 22 дня назад +1

      glade made finally video you

    • @Kelnx
      @Kelnx 22 дня назад +4

      @@raheemabdul1066 Not everyone is a native English speaker. Or did you honestly believe the whole world speaks your language?

    • @rudolfsykora3505
      @rudolfsykora3505 22 дня назад +3

      @@Kelnx I found out in last 50y of my life that people think it has to do something with intelligence, but I think bullying people or disrespecting them without deeper thinking of its consequences does have something to do with intelligence tho , or maybe just little bit

    • @bm5298
      @bm5298 21 день назад +3

      im disappointed the opener didnt say that all of the data is based on a sample size of 1. Still waiting on another water laden planet with a moon in the goldey locks zone with no more than a 2% mass variance and similar star age. for it to be a control sample it would have to have 0 technological development.

    • @kenlen8029
      @kenlen8029 15 дней назад +1

      Many people probably can't sit through long form video unfortunately.

  • @graxxor
    @graxxor 9 дней назад

    Alex your videos are always top notch and this one is right up there with the best of them!

  • @Astristul
    @Astristul 22 дня назад +2

    At first I've clicked without looking at the length of the video, thinking it would be like 20 min or so. I usually look at your videos during my breakfast 😁 (thank God it's Saturday, though 😅) . When I've reached the Polar Vortex chapter, I've thought to look at the length, thinking this is way over 20 min ... and, boy, was I surprised! 🙂 Thanks a lot for your video! Impressive work! I've really enjoyed it! 👌

  • @r2ecko
    @r2ecko 22 дня назад +29

    6:40 FYI at this part(so far in your video) is incorrect. Paradoxically Earth is warmer when it is farther from the Sun. This is due to the seasonal effect of the uneven distribution of land and water between the northern and southern hemispheres.
    July, when Earth is at its most distant, is also summer for the northern hemisphere. The north has more land which heats faster than water. January, when Earth is closest to the Sun, is summer for the southern hemisphere dominated by oceans which respond more slowly to the increase in the Sun’s energy.
    The tilt in Earth’s axis produces almost 20 times the effect of the changing distance from the Sun, and the difference in local geography is 2 to 3 times more important than the changing distance.
    We make our closest approach to the Sun (147.5 million km) in January, that's called perihelion, and we're farthest from the Sun (152.6 million km) in July, that's aphelion.
    "Averaged over the globe, sunlight falling on Earth in July (aphelion) is indeed about 7% less intense than it is in January (perihelion)." That's the good news. The bad news is it's still hot. "In fact the average temperature of Earth at aphelion is about 4° F (2.3° C) higher than it is at perihelion." Earth is actually warmer when we're farther from the Sun!
    How can that be? It's because our planet is --in a sense-- lopsided. Continents and oceans aren't distributed evenly around the globe. There's more land in the northern hemisphere and more water in the south. During the month of July --near the start of northern summer-- the land-crowded northern half of our planet is tilted toward the Sun. "Earth's temperature (averaged over the entire globe) is slightly higher in July because the Sun is shining down on all that land, which heats up rather easily," says Spencer.
    Solar heating raises the temperature of continents more than water because the heat capacity of land is lower. Bill Patzert, an oceanographer at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory explains: "The temperature of land changes easily, which is what we mean by low heat capacity. Consider the desert: At night the desert is cold, perhaps only 60° F. When the Sun rises in the morning the temperature might jump to 100° F or more." Such mercurial behavior is characteristic of materials like rocks and soil with little thermal inertia. It doesn't take much sunlight to substantially elevate their temperature.
    "On the other hand," says Patzert, "oceans have a tremendous heat capacity. They tend to keep [the energy] they capture and are very stingy about giving it back." This quality moderates the temperature swings of ocean environments. "Let's say you went sailing off Malibu Beach at noon," says Patzert. "The offshore temperature might be 75° F -- pretty pleasant!" What happens after sunset? "The temperature drops, but only a few degrees because the thermal inertia of the ocean is so high."
    All this explains why July is our planet's warmest month: Northern continents baked by the aphelion Sun elevate the average temperature of the entire globe. Six months later, in January, the situation is reversed as our planet presents its water-dominated hemisphere to the Sun. "We're closer to the Sun in January," says Spencer, "but the extra sunlight gets spread throughout the oceans." Southern summer in January (perihelion) is therefore cooler than northern summer in July (aphelion). Strange but true!
    Another notable difference between summers in the two hemispheres is their duration," adds Lebo. According to Kepler's 2nd Law, planets move more slowly at aphelion than they do at perihelion. As a result, Northern summer on Earth is 2 to 3 days longer than southern summer -- which gives the Sun even more time to bake the northern continents.[1]
    The fact that people living in the northern hemisphere are warmer when near aphelion is primarily due to the seasons, which are caused by the tilt of our axis. The fact that the Earth as a whole is also warmer when near aphelion is due to the difference in geography between the two hemispheres (mostly water in southern hemisphere, water and land in the northern hemisphere). In numerical terms, the tilt of our axis produces almost 20 times the effect of our changing distance from the Sun, and the difference in local geography is 2 to 3 times more important than the changing distance.

    • @bueb8674
      @bueb8674 20 дней назад +4

      TL;DR: Earth's land is not evenly distributed and the thermal inertia and heat capacity of the Oceans is different than that of land, plus a bunch of other factors. Basically we're out of phase with what you'd expect based on the distance alone.

    • @Toropetskii
      @Toropetskii 19 дней назад +7

      Your analysis is correct but so is the presenter's - he doesn't contest the actual overall temperature effect on the earth, and correctly shows that it is changing. Northern hemisphere gets milder summers compared to southern - that's fact.

    • @shottyhottie
      @shottyhottie 16 дней назад

      👆🤓

    • @vicbornas7263
      @vicbornas7263 14 дней назад +2

      Your comments are very well written as they show & explain the complexities of Earth's weather & climates in each hemisphere - thank you

    • @tommybatts-jl2lp
      @tommybatts-jl2lp 10 дней назад +2

      I think you just explained why we're not in an ice age.

  • @staff97
    @staff97 17 дней назад +11

    i literally go to sleep to these. so interesting but also relaxing. it keeps my mind occupied

    • @leokaloper4132
      @leokaloper4132 16 дней назад

      You're like me. BUT, read ths : When I described on a social platform what do I do to relex, (I'd say learn the world around me) the answer I got was kind of "Gesus Christ, what would you be watching if you were worried"

  • @gonlaserna
    @gonlaserna 17 дней назад +1

    Dude! Next level content, so so good. Thanks man.👌🏽✨🌌

  • @opiesmith9270
    @opiesmith9270 5 дней назад +2

    “It won’t likely be something that ends human civilization all together” those odds don’t give me much comfort 😅

  • @Graycy808
    @Graycy808 22 дня назад +5

    Very nice video! Educational and your videos are always visually beautiful. Thank you? Plus your voice is so pleasing to listen to.

  • @micheltomassini
    @micheltomassini 10 дней назад +8

    What an incredible and comprehensive video to explain how our climate works and how we are affecting it. Thank you for this gift. This is a real gem. BRAVO!

  • @JimmyCrackorn
    @JimmyCrackorn 4 дня назад

    Thank you for going into deep detail to explain this to people. Hopefully they'll start listening now that they've got a more complete rundown of the science.

  • @metalmindedmaniac2587
    @metalmindedmaniac2587 22 дня назад +6

    I’m super happy Astrum put out this 1hr almost 2 video thanks for that I am like many others intrigued by your content as I find it to be informative and calming I learn a lot about space from you and other channels kinda similar like Fraser Kane, PBS Space Time and others for more education thanks again bro!!!

  • @andyincalimoto843
    @andyincalimoto843 23 дня назад +3

    wow almost 2 hours that's a full on feature movie, gonna have to wait to watch later

  • @tobysemler
    @tobysemler 9 дней назад +1

    Brilliant video. This needs to be shared with EVERYBODY.

  • @mauriziomauricone
    @mauriziomauricone 11 дней назад

    Thank you Astrum for this amazing video 🙏🏻

  • @PangeaB
    @PangeaB 17 дней назад +12

    it would be nice to talk a bit also about pollution and not just about CO2...great video anyway thanks!

    • @mansoormannix1753
      @mansoormannix1753 10 дней назад

      It would be nice if he talk much about the massive deforestation of our designated rainforest for timbers and land clearance to accommodate industrial grazing ranches. And what is the impact of this action and the chain of reaction of tempering with massive ecosystem? Could our life survive the imbalances of ecosystem. Amazon is now cleared to create ranches and boost Brazil economy. I hope the new government is now regulating and recovered the lands grabbed and illegal acquired by the former president elites.

    • @MrJerry101
      @MrJerry101 9 дней назад +2

      How about the last two years of solar x-flares (some of the biggest on record) and the increased volcanic activities?

    • @BenLatterell
      @BenLatterell 9 дней назад

      Lolz that is the funny thing about this guy
      Zero info or data or explanation of why we have such insane rapid warming. He just kind of glosses over that and says that this is some more advanced thing and right in the beginning he basically tells everyone watching that you're a moron and you should delete whatever you know so that his subsequent 1.9 hours of time completely installs into your brain and replaces whatever you thought before.

    • @itspeekaboo
      @itspeekaboo 3 дня назад

      @@mansoormannix1753
      Yes indeed deforestation, however not so sure if our species' impact on Earth's land has been any more devastating than the oceans, or our atmosphere? if you consider the size of things.

  • @tomschneider7555
    @tomschneider7555 22 дня назад +11

    Wow, what a comprehensive review of all relevant cycles influencing our climate. Excellent work

  • @dougblessin
    @dougblessin 22 дня назад +2

    interesting balanced and informative approach to the topic. Thanks!

  • @baraahhamdi8533
    @baraahhamdi8533 10 дней назад

    your voice was so kind , i couldn't leave this video till i watched to the end

  • @petarswift5089
    @petarswift5089 22 дня назад +47

    If a nuclear war starts tomorrow, the climate debate is meaningless. According to Milankovitch, the atmosphere is very gentle and sensitive to many influences and it needed a long time to support life. Greetings from Serbia.

    • @thereignofthezero225
      @thereignofthezero225 22 дня назад +5

      A mere f @ rt in the wind

    • @Boudiccanyc
      @Boudiccanyc 21 день назад

      This is an idiotic take. Serbians are known for being smart but apparently that didn't rub off on you.

    • @mirin9851
      @mirin9851 15 дней назад

      If we slammed by another asteroid or comet pretty much everything we know will become irrelevant. This is more likely than we've been told

    • @kallah4999
      @kallah4999 7 дней назад

      Sound like my wallet🤔

    • @opiesmith9270
      @opiesmith9270 5 дней назад

      You didn’t flea Russia? Hope you don’t get thrown into your dictators illegal meat grinder failure of a war.

  • @PvtSchlock
    @PvtSchlock 21 день назад +27

    Polar vortex dipping South is a good time to go out at night to get you a Subway footlong.

    • @presidentpoopypants1448
      @presidentpoopypants1448 13 дней назад

      just be sure its really really late at night, and beware of others in the neighborhood wearing red hats..... that's a bad sign.

    • @baneverything5580
      @baneverything5580 9 дней назад +1

      We used to call this an Arctic Cold Front. 1984 is in full force right now. Most people, for whatever reasons, lack the intelligence to detect this climate grift or understand why they`re doing it.

    • @user-ue5yw6zb9k
      @user-ue5yw6zb9k День назад

      ​@@baneverything5580were Exxon's & Shell's leaked documents expressing climate change concerns from 40 years ago a grift as well?

  • @RycckayaMafiya
    @RycckayaMafiya 7 дней назад

    Excellent, I am glad someone has best use of their intelligence to pit all aspects into a more profound way of describing where everyone else is afraid to go.

  • @engenulf
    @engenulf 22 дня назад +1

    Awesome documentary, riveting from start to end.

  • @robinkelly1770
    @robinkelly1770 17 дней назад +5

    Australian here
    The delay or otherwise of our monsoon has zero to do with our bushfires. These can happen on any and all years but are
    u s u a l l y worse on el nino years as the south of the continent experiences temperatures in the high 40's to low 50's in these weather patterns receives little or no rain in summer except the wettest la nina year (when the monsoons come 2,000km further south). We even get bushfires in dry southern winters but they are far mor easily contained. Discounting the la nina years (about 1 in 20) where the monsoons come far south our summer rainfaill is consistently very low except the east coast. In el nino years our winters become unusually dry and this coupled with extreme summer heat from constant high pressure cells causes our most massive bushfires.
    Edit. 2020 was the tailend of a three year elnino. I know the the northern hemisphere claims the el nino occurs in their summer, but it occurs around christmas - the Australian summer. By our winter the el nino had passed as had the bushfires...

    • @fab60s64
      @fab60s64 9 дней назад

      Many of our fires are fire bugs unfortunately

  • @chrismaxwell1624
    @chrismaxwell1624 20 дней назад +3

    That march vortex really messed up things. Dead tress. Fruit crops. Expect high prices for summer fruit this year.

  • @spaceman9599
    @spaceman9599 3 дня назад

    Really nicely done!

  • @pelagiajones7963
    @pelagiajones7963 13 дней назад +1

    Beautiful, insightful and most interesting video ❤ 🙏

  • @eggseed6543
    @eggseed6543 20 дней назад +3

    Glad to know that i need to wait only 26,000 years to enjoy autumn

    • @StoneDeceiver
      @StoneDeceiver 13 дней назад +1

      i am able and willing to last 26,000 years and 1 day for that sweet, sweet, autumn rain on fallen leaf smell... ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh 💯💕🌼🌸🦝🤗☺☺☺☺👍👌💯😊👁👅👁

  • @heidihill2361
    @heidihill2361 23 дня назад +9

    Excellent presentation, thank you..

  • @n3ckrad
    @n3ckrad 22 дня назад +2

    Well done. Really learned something here!

  • @simonmaney3438
    @simonmaney3438 22 дня назад

    Thank you for your considerable effort.
    A fascinating read is Dave Lowe's 'The Alarmist' and his work with Charles Keeling (of the 'Keeling Curve'). Dave worked out how to measure the chemical composition of the atmosphere (more difficult than it sounds) and from there they were able to confirm the human contribution to the rising greenhouse gas levels - 50 years ago!

  • @lindawalker8949
    @lindawalker8949 10 дней назад +19

    The approximate 50 actively erupting volcanoes spewing CO2 and SO2 into the air certainly helps with greenhouse gases. Tonga's volcano sent steam amounting to 63000 olympic size pools int the Stratosphere. I wonder how our footprint measures up.

    • @baneverything5580
      @baneverything5580 9 дней назад

      Well, the "scientists" are now saying volcanoes have no effect at all...regardless of size or number. Amazing, eh? History is being erased at a record pace.

    • @snoutysnouterson
      @snoutysnouterson 4 дня назад +2

      I'd like to know this too

    • @fadingbeleifs
      @fadingbeleifs День назад

      It's not even measurable... There's actually been a downward trend over the last several hundred years of CO2 concentration in the atmosphere... It's currently at 0.04%... plant life dies entirely at 0.02%... once it drops below 0.03%, certain types of photosynthesis cease to exist.
      Climate change exists, but the entire idea that humanity caused it, is nothing more than a fraud to wring money out of people... And have them willingly support it!

    • @JasonP6339
      @JasonP6339 День назад

      Our footprint doesn't even begin to touch volcanoes...... One single volcano eruption like Tonga can release 100 years worth of CO2 if it was created by humans. And as you've noted there are always MANY volcanoes spewing CO2 into the atmosphere every single day of the year.
      That's why the entire thing is a scam. It is nothing but a ploy for power, money, and control. We can all literally end our lives as we know them and start living a truly CO2 NetZero life for every single human on the planet and it wouldn't make a difference if one single supervolcano goes off in the next 10,000 years....... And that's not even including all of the regular volcano activity.....

  • @Oomzilla
    @Oomzilla 17 дней назад +3

    Second time around. And loving it still. Conclusion if you study weather you can talk about it . If not no not allowed. Therefore we know we're corrupt, politicians are given more airtime!

  • @ThunderBassistJay
    @ThunderBassistJay 21 день назад

    Great explanation of climate cycles. 👍 Thanks, Alex! Being over 60 years old, I remember the effects of El Niño and La Niña.

  • @raphaelandrews3617
    @raphaelandrews3617 2 дня назад

    Thank you for posting this.I really leaned a lot about the planet. .

  • @xandery8589
    @xandery8589 23 дня назад +30

    This is what I’ve been waiting for. The 2hrs long before bed. My anxiety ass needs this before sleep 🤌🏼

    • @PMMcIntyre
      @PMMcIntyre 23 дня назад +3

      Exercise is healthier

    • @stargazer4683
      @stargazer4683 23 дня назад +2

      Btw a Asteroid can hit any day, any hour any minute…. Sleep tight.

    • @xandery8589
      @xandery8589 23 дня назад +3

      @@stargazer4683 that’s will be blessed. This world is fucked up

    • @nahbreddaaa32
      @nahbreddaaa32 23 дня назад +4

      I still don't understand how his voice knocks me out every night

    • @stelamo
      @stelamo 23 дня назад +1

      @@nahbreddaaa32 same Astrum and Isaac Arthur are my friends

  • @bob3031000
    @bob3031000 23 дня назад +7

    Great video ❤

  • @franzupet4406
    @franzupet4406 21 день назад +1

    Great work :) Thank you!

  • @nickguy8037
    @nickguy8037 20 дней назад +1

    Absolutely awesome video.
    Thank you.🙏

  • @hugo-garcia
    @hugo-garcia 20 дней назад +3

    Now I know what "The winter is coming" really means

  • @Dogo.R
    @Dogo.R 23 дня назад +11

    The world seems to constantly get deeper the closer you look. Even in the most simple areas of life. So I beleive if I dont pursue being an expert in it I should just give "my" current stance to the most nuanced and detailed explaination Ive heard. They have shown the most evidence for the deepest knowledge on the topic.
    Thank you for making this. Im sure, as with everything, even more nuance exists... there always is... even in the most simple seeming areas of life.

    • @AH-lw2bj
      @AH-lw2bj 23 дня назад +1

      Well yeah, we live in a universe that's almost infinite, and each one of us has our own small universe inside our skulls....
      Nothing is simple

    • @rcchristian2
      @rcchristian2 22 дня назад

      An infinite Mandelbrot set of knowledge and detail. We can just keep zooming in.. or zooming out.

  • @sudhisubbu5852
    @sudhisubbu5852 11 дней назад +2

    It's 10 days since i have started watching the video and still i haven't finished it, i fall asleep watch it , mind you it's a very interesting video as of now i have started watching cycle that sun goes through

  • @lukeclements8938
    @lukeclements8938 23 дня назад +2

    An amazing way to explain in depth climate change, bravo Astrum

  • @starkissed9shadow
    @starkissed9shadow 23 дня назад +4

    Thank you so much for a long video 😭🙏🏻

  • @berniepoppe9742
    @berniepoppe9742 23 дня назад +83

    Terrence Howard can predict the weather at all times.

    • @KelticTim
      @KelticTim 22 дня назад

      Lmao. And black holes don’t exist

    • @covert0overt_810
      @covert0overt_810 22 дня назад +28

      nigola tesla

    • @jesserutt7413
      @jesserutt7413 22 дня назад +4

      @@covert0overt_810😂

    • @wasdwasdedsf
      @wasdwasdedsf 22 дня назад

      terrence is about as scientific as these academia hacks parroting every mainstream narrative around...

    • @prdiludi4432
      @prdiludi4432 22 дня назад +2

      @@covert0overt_810 You win the internet for a day ser. lmao

  • @science.hippie
    @science.hippie 22 дня назад

    I really like this content and video specifically, I found it very informative. One minor note, when reffering and showing the current magnetic poles you show and talk about the north magnetic pole and the geographical north of the earth. Currently the south magnetic pole is in the northern geographic hemisphere. The red north of a compass is attracted to the earth's south magnetic pole.

  • @astridwenham3790
    @astridwenham3790 21 день назад

    fantastic, really enjoyed this!

  • @jotapan9521
    @jotapan9521 23 дня назад +3

    Hey Alex, are you writing all this, editing the video etc just by yourself? Impressive work ❤

  • @ajlukelepuke
    @ajlukelepuke 23 дня назад +66

    But burning Styrofoam is just so much FUN!!

    • @termy3934
      @termy3934 23 дня назад +9

      @@user-gc6wd7dm4w you know what else is a problem?
      2x+3y=49

    • @JustCallMeCheese1
      @JustCallMeCheese1 22 дня назад

      @@termy3934the answer is 12

    • @TheBrazilianHue
      @TheBrazilianHue 22 дня назад

      Indeed. You have a great point.

    • @thereignofthezero225
      @thereignofthezero225 22 дня назад +2

      ​@@termy3934figuring out one's gender?

    • @leomoval
      @leomoval 21 день назад

      ​@@thereignofthezero225
      LoL

  • @Richardj410
    @Richardj410 20 дней назад +1

    Nice that you said 'nearly' but a refresh was nice. thanks

  • @shereeglasson22
    @shereeglasson22 9 дней назад

    Will come back for the rest. 29 minutes in and very good ! 😊

  • @Dudleymiddleton
    @Dudleymiddleton 23 дня назад +24

    "Hmmm, cracking video, Gromi-it!" :)

  • @MrFlazz99
    @MrFlazz99 18 дней назад +60

    Correct me if I'm wrong, but with regard to the alleged sudden relatively large increase in temperature since 1850, attributed to human activity... is it not true that climate heralds have adjusted temperature records downwards for the intervening period in order to give the impression of a significantly and steadily increasing average temperature?
    In reality, when considering the unadulterated data, the overall increase has not been around 1 degree, but only a fraction of that AND this comes with a margin of error that could even nullify any apparent increase (or conversely double it, but still below a whole degree).
    In addition to this, we have the phenomenon of encroachment of development upon weather station sites - we all know about urban heat islands (where towns and cities tend to be warmer than the surrounding countryside). This then causes affected weather stations to register an increase of average temperature over time. The distribution of weather stations is increasingly urbanised, so temperature records are going to appear to increase.
    The role of CO2 as a greenhouse gas is seriously overstated - the contribution of this trace gas is in the order of hundredths of a degree, in contrast to the effect of atmospheric water vapour, which raises Earth's average surface temperature by 15 degrees. Even if all of the atmospheric CO2 increase in the last couple of hundred years were to be attributed to human activity, mankind's contribution to the warming effect would still only be hundredths of a degree.
    As for rising sea levels, I only have to think of Al Gore's predictions to see the mockery. Very low-lying parts of the world were supposed to have disappeared beneath the waves by now, but the Inconvenient Truth is that they haven't done so. Unquestionably sea levels do rise and fall, typically over fairly long periods of time (during glaciations and interglacial periods) and certainly slowly enough for people to barely notice over the span of a lifetime. I wouldn't worry. Similarly, I wouldn't worry about an approaching glaciation which is likely to occur over the next several thousand years - mankind (and life on earth) will probably adapt to whatever happens.

    • @notstarboard
      @notstarboard 16 дней назад +22

      Some sources will report the temperature anomaly vs. pre-industrial levels, while others will report it versus a more recent baseline (e.g. 1950-1980). That's why some of the temperature increases might seem smaller and some of the historical levels might seem adjusted downwards on some plots. However, if you look at the delta between any two years on any of these plots, you're going to get about the same result. As the video correctly states, we know the average global temperature with a high degree of accuracy and have for most of the industrial age. There is consensus among scientists that the planet is warming quickly, and that this warming is primarily being caused by humans burning fossil fuels. This is not an urban heat island effect. It's not like scientists have only been taking time series with raw thermometer readings from the planet's cities. We can get temperature via satellite nowadays. And besides, it's just not reasonable to attribute global warming, which there is scientific consensus on, to incompetence in data collection and processing.
      The temperature anomalies that have been recorded aren't even close to falling within the margin of error. Error bars are in the neighborhood of 0.03 to 0.04 degrees C depending on the data set you're referencing. The anomalies are on the order of 1.3 degrees C versus pre-industrial levels. Please do go look up the data yourself, or just skip to 1:48:34 for a montage; they present the data in a few useful ways.
      I don't know where you're getting your information about CO2, but you're misinformed. Over the past several hundred thousand years, average global temperature and atmospheric CO2 concentration have been tightly coupled. Prior to the industrial revolution, atmospheric CO2 had bounced between about 180 and 280 ppm, with 280 representing a mild period and 180 representing an ice age. We're over 420 ppm now, and going up by close to 3 ppm every year. Water vapor is technically a stronger greenhouse gas than CO2, but it doesn't stay in the atmosphere nearly as long. So, while atmosphere water vapor is certainly a positive feedback on global warming (warmer planet -> more atmospheric water vapor -> warmer planet), that isn't the reason for global warming. The cause is primarily carbon emissions, which is why reducing carbon emissions is the primary focus when trying to address the problem. Its impact is demonstrably much higher than hundredths of a degree, as it is responsible for the majority of the ~1.3 degree C increase we've seen vs. pre-industrial levels, and its tight coupling with temperature farther back in Earth's history. Refer as well to the video, which cited the evolution of plants and cyanobacteria, both of which exchange atmospheric CO2 for O2, as potential causes of massive historical drops in global temperatures.
      Sea level rise is on the order of 20 cm versus pre-industrial levels. However, the net effect is more pronounced in many coastal cities, as they tend to be sinking, in part due to groundwater pumping and the weight of the buildings. The warmer atmosphere also results in stronger storms, which causes enhanced coastal erosion and worsened flooding. The rate of sea level rise is increasing as well, in part because it's a positive feedback loop (warming oceans -> ice melt -> less energy reflected back into space -> more ice melt), and in part because human CO2 emissions have never been higher (all of our efforts thus far have only slowed the rate of increase; emissions are still growing steadily higher). All of these factors have combined to hammer coastal communities, as predicted. I don't know who was claiming Florida would literally be underwater by now, but that was never a realistic expectation. However, if all land-based ice were to melt, global sea levels would rise on the order of 100 meters (see 1:48:58), and global warming is much more intense in polar regions (see again, 1:48:34; look at the anomalies around the poles that have built up in recent years).

    • @kwameoluwasomi1518
      @kwameoluwasomi1518 16 дней назад

      Just saving this comment to read later

    • @stevemcha7129
      @stevemcha7129 15 дней назад +3

      Excellent summation. Thank you.

    • @roydenthompson5950
      @roydenthompson5950 14 дней назад +2

      Unfortunately everything eventually gets politicised and funding is the only reliable barometer

    • @MrFlazz99
      @MrFlazz99 14 дней назад +13

      The so-called consensus among scientists is nonsense - it is a consensus of mostly people who don't understand properly and are along for the activist ride, plus people like Gore who simply wanted to make a fortune out of fleecing people with scary messages. The activist voice is very prominent and this threatens academic funding for those who speak up in favour of objectivity, so some voices are silenced and people forced to tow the activist line to keep their funding. As for rising sea levels, check out the Maldives and also ask why so many wealthy people choose to live right at the water's edge. Do they know something the activists don't? By the by, when ice caps melt, the land beneath often springs up as the weight comes off and sea ice melting has zero sea level effect. The Antarctic maximum seasonal sea ice extent has been at record levels in recent years, according to NASA satellite monitoring (since 1971).

  • @aclearlight
    @aclearlight 12 дней назад

    Great tutorial on the M. cycles! Thank you.

  • @HotelPapa100
    @HotelPapa100 22 дня назад +2

    As our calendar is tied to the spring point, We'll always have winter in January in the northern hemisphere. The calendar precesses along with earth's axis. At least as long as this culture organising things is around...

  • @gregkelly2145
    @gregkelly2145 23 дня назад +28

    When you start speaking about CO2 at around 12:30, why are you showing nuclear cooling towers which emit no CO2? We need more nuclear power, not less, so please do not associate that with carbon emissions.

    • @Punished_Trump
      @Punished_Trump 23 дня назад +15

      Because this channel propagates the climate change myth

    • @gregkelly2145
      @gregkelly2145 23 дня назад +2

      @@Punished_Trump We still need more nuclear power, not less. But irrational climate wackos don't like nuclear either I suppose.

    • @KelticTim
      @KelticTim 22 дня назад +10

      @@Punished_Trumpit’s not a myth, it’s happening, what’s debatable is just how much we effect it and what the actual issues are that arise from it.

    • @akairibbon4658
      @akairibbon4658 22 дня назад +4

      @@Punished_Trump hurrrr durr

    • @Codysdab
      @Codysdab 22 дня назад +16

      ​@@KelticTimclimate change is always happening, but climate change in daily parlance is referring to the Anthropogenic Global Warming hypothesis. That is 100% debatable, especially the "solutions" we see put forth to a problem that can't be proven.
      All I see is poverty forced on people for a problem that only exists in computer models.

  • @auntvesuvi3872
    @auntvesuvi3872 23 дня назад +4

    Thanks, Alex! 🌀

  • @CTHellcat
    @CTHellcat 19 дней назад +1

    Bravo!!! Thank you for this excellent video.

  • @culturebreath369
    @culturebreath369 21 день назад

    Shared my friend! Another great video! 🎉
    Amazing how much of a "water" planet we actually are. Its pretty insane the amount of non aquatic wildlife that thrives here. The fact we arent more water or all ice is an intense balancing game. 😮❤

  • @ricardioscarbonara102
    @ricardioscarbonara102 23 дня назад +6

    Astrum, I really love you guys. You are such a calming presence in this chaotic life.

    • @2147B
      @2147B 22 дня назад

      Eh. it's entertainment but don't believe everything you hear with out doing your own research, on this channel. A lot of these are no more of a theory than the ones they claim are false.

  • @alphared4655
    @alphared4655 23 дня назад +10

    Driving on a Memorial Day road trip. Perfect video for the drive. This is an important, unbiased discussion that I cannot thank you enough for. You have guts to go against the narrative! Good job

    • @leialee6820
      @leialee6820 23 дня назад +1

      He went along with man made CO2 causing global warming which is totally untrue & is just one gigantic hoax.

    • @old_gaffer
      @old_gaffer 23 дня назад +5

      I hoped for the same and ended up being really disappointed by the end of a 2 hrs long video. He repeated 100% mainstream narrative. Which I would be fine with, but what was cunning was the clickbaity title pulling in people to watch 2 hrs of exactly 0 controversy.

    • @rustyshackleford5166
      @rustyshackleford5166 23 дня назад

      I've see lots of info about how in the 70s the climate change people were warning about an ice age.
      My theory is that they created things that would purposely warm the planet and it worked a little too well and now we're dealing with those consequences.
      I'm sure if we had enough mirrored surfaces deployed strategicly across our lands, we could reflect enough sunlight to reverse the climate mess that these people possibly created.
      But that would be too simple.

    • @ermpson5799
      @ermpson5799 23 дня назад +9

      ​@@old_gaffer The "mainstream narrative" is based on the scientific data described in the video. These facts have been known to scientists for decades before it became mainstream knowledge.

    • @old_gaffer
      @old_gaffer 23 дня назад +6

      @@ermpson5799 and no one here is arguing that. I pointed out the fact that the original title of the video was "my most controversial video on YT...." and there was no controversy whatsoever in it. so don't get triggered for no reason.

  • @marioskoutras6583
    @marioskoutras6583 8 дней назад

    The best and most important video I've watched in a long time. Τhis should be shown in all the schools throughout the world.

  • @Ibrahim_Orhan
    @Ibrahim_Orhan 22 дня назад

    I like a lot. Thank you for your hard effort to make this Masterpiece.

  • @wakjob961
    @wakjob961 22 дня назад +12

    Ah!, you got the CC banner under your video. Wear it like a badge of honor.

    • @alecjasonn
      @alecjasonn 18 дней назад +2

      Talking about CC at all puts that on your video

    • @i_am_a_toast_of_french
      @i_am_a_toast_of_french 15 дней назад +2

      all videos about climate change get it

  • @kyledekeyzer9439
    @kyledekeyzer9439 22 дня назад

    very beautiful docu this, real pro and pleasant enjoyable watching . big thank you

  • @dancooper8551
    @dancooper8551 13 дней назад

    Excellent video!!

  • @dr.mcquackle8179
    @dr.mcquackle8179 23 дня назад +8

    19:45 "Could occur in late 2023"?

    • @areteclimbing
      @areteclimbing 22 дня назад +2

      I'm guessing a lot of this is a supercut with some new bits too.

    • @0ptimal
      @0ptimal 17 дней назад +1

      Maybe im wrong but think he was pointing out the prediction coming true. The claim was made in 2022.

    • @Signupking
      @Signupking 11 дней назад

      Gives off the feeling that AI was used for this video.

  • @ChrisMattar
    @ChrisMattar 23 дня назад +10

    Shoutout to Milutin Milankovic! Go Serbia.

  • @lewisalden4870
    @lewisalden4870 6 дней назад +1

    I can't get over it gets colder the closer earth gets to the sun, that just makes no sense, for it to be winter then. Crazy world

  • @JohnBl7167
    @JohnBl7167 11 дней назад

    This is great thanks 😊

  • @nicoma3949
    @nicoma3949 22 дня назад +7

    Sources?

    • @Mika-ph6ku
      @Mika-ph6ku 21 день назад +1

      They were in the video denthead

    • @nicoma3949
      @nicoma3949 21 день назад

      @@Mika-ph6ku Yeah you´re so right. Its so easy to proof them when they are in the video and not as a text somehwere, thanks for that correction Mrs obvious ;)

    • @Mika-ph6ku
      @Mika-ph6ku 21 день назад

      @@nicoma3949 You can copy the information about the sources in the video and search them on google... Why does it have to be a link for you?

  • @Idellphany
    @Idellphany 23 дня назад +10

    Incredible amounts of Variables

    • @pmrose18
      @pmrose18 22 дня назад +2

      including the probably many we dont even yet know

    • @texasslingleadsomtingwong8751
      @texasslingleadsomtingwong8751 22 дня назад

      Thre variables in an equation makes fir good times. Four is beginning for endless hair pulling and being disowned . Five is , your on your own .
      But this weather variable mess is plain insanity . It is nice to see someone put forth the time to make it somewhat more digestible.

  • @jlaxgang7233
    @jlaxgang7233 6 дней назад

    Bravo as soon as I get some extra loot you're welcome lol
    Keep shining kid!

  • @MikeDS49
    @MikeDS49 16 дней назад

    It was amazing listening to two world experts in climate discuss very simplified Fermi-style models of climate change and behavior, and successfully getting in the ball park of what's simulated and measured. While drinking some coffee and eating donuts supplied between physics talks. It shows how robust the models and simulations are when you can make different but still physically valid simplifications and still get similar results.

  • @projectcontractors
    @projectcontractors 20 дней назад +5

    "One of the most important findings that climate scientists have come up with in the last several decades is that Earth's climate changes in cycles and these cycles are driven by changes in Earth's orbit around the Sun not in changes in the strength of the Sun but changes in the orbit." ~Dr. Ruddiman, University of Virginia.

    • @verdi2310
      @verdi2310 18 дней назад +3

      Change in intervals of thousands years. Not so fast as we see now. Not even close. Human activity is the most important factor now.

    • @JustinStLouis-xz7ut
      @JustinStLouis-xz7ut 8 дней назад

      ​@@verdi2310 We can't produce enough CO2 for that. The atmosphere is constantly cleaning and cooling itself.
      This cleansing is why there's so much carbonic acid fallout. CO2 has a poor ability to maintain enough thermal energy to contribute to the warming we're seeing today. Something much bigger is at the helm of climate changes.

  • @BB-cf9gx
    @BB-cf9gx 23 дня назад +4

    Thank you.

  • @spencergallucci5309
    @spencergallucci5309 12 дней назад

    Ive lived in Oklahoma most of my life and my entire childhood was a drought, hot and dry, but the past 20 years have grown wet, with frequent thunderstorms. Oklahoma has been so lush it feels like a different place nowadays (thunderclaps outside) yet we have all this rain and 90 - 100 F is changing our climate

    • @TomBlanchard-nc5rd
      @TomBlanchard-nc5rd 10 дней назад

      Oklahama with South Texas/Florida rains and humidity--can hurricanes be far behind? Mover over, tornadoes!

  • @rarebird_82
    @rarebird_82 12 дней назад

    Thank you for this bulk shipment of education and common sense, and for pronouncing Tromsø correctly 👌🏻

  • @depressedyouth
    @depressedyouth 23 дня назад +75

    Winter is coming

    • @travishartman5662
      @travishartman5662 22 дня назад +5

      Not in the northern hemisphere.

    • @glenwaldrop8166
      @glenwaldrop8166 22 дня назад

      @@travishartman5662 😂
      Search for this "Global temperature relative to peak Holocene temperature, based on ocean cores (NASA).png"
      The *whole planet* cools during an ice age. Not matter how much you hate humanity that fact doesn't change.

    • @melburnian
      @melburnian 22 дня назад +1

      i fear you are correct

    • @ponyote
      @ponyote 21 день назад +4

      On a long enough time scale.

    • @kingdiesel68
      @kingdiesel68 20 дней назад

      Yes, we're going into another ice age ! Global warming is a scam!

  • @casaamaril
    @casaamaril 23 дня назад +7

    Almost two hours 😮? Someone has apparently been working very hard