A “huge discovery” by the James Webb Space Telescope?

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 16 янв 2025

Комментарии • 3,5 тыс.

  • @Sparkitus805
    @Sparkitus805 Год назад +1475

    We’re gonna need a bigger telescope.

    • @henhousewoodworking1351
      @henhousewoodworking1351 Год назад +30

      😂

    • @Me-ne5uu
      @Me-ne5uu Год назад +21

      LOL

    • @Charlie-Em
      @Charlie-Em Год назад +22

      If they got a bigger telescope they would break astrophysics

    • @adriansmusic2445
      @adriansmusic2445 Год назад +22

      Show me the way to go home....

    • @tracytrawick322
      @tracytrawick322 Год назад +11

      Just like guns, TVs, and tanks, we are always going to need bigger and better, around the table.
      I prefer a bigger buzz to view Webb images.
      Lost in space? No. Lost in time.

  • @ice-xv1hi
    @ice-xv1hi Год назад +260

    The more you know, the more you realize there is much more you don't know.

    • @JamesThomas-pd3ck
      @JamesThomas-pd3ck Год назад

      Limited intelligences can't grip the whole of something bigger then there consciousness itself lol... Such as the double slit experiment??? There's things that defy reason the way we consider things to function or behave or exist at all...

    • @Yamas258
      @Yamas258 11 месяцев назад

      It’s like the show “LOST” the shows biggest answers only gives us even more perplexing mysteries .

    • @dankuchar6821
      @dankuchar6821 11 месяцев назад +3

      Intelligent people understand this fact.

    • @dankuchar6821
      @dankuchar6821 11 месяцев назад +1

      Intelligent people understand this fact.

    • @dankuchar6821
      @dankuchar6821 11 месяцев назад

      Intelligent people understand this fact.

  • @tmart43
    @tmart43 Год назад +214

    Her sheer joy and excitement is permeating the camera, it’s infectious😂

    • @matapendejos9190
      @matapendejos9190 Год назад +1

      It’s scary like unholy.

    • @chromeinox
      @chromeinox Год назад +1

      That's a great joke!

    • @HitLeftistsWithHammers
      @HitLeftistsWithHammers Год назад +1

      YAAAAAAAS QUEEEEEEN PREACH AN SLAY AN SHEIT

    • @godbyone
      @godbyone Год назад

      Cgi

    • @yoshimitsu8643
      @yoshimitsu8643 9 месяцев назад

      Not only her when this thing was set up and started sending pictures all those things scientist had confirmed before and specifically this everyone was as hyped as her
      They were all like little babies

  • @MeetThaNewDealer
    @MeetThaNewDealer Год назад +1129

    “I would rather have questions that can't be answered than answers that can't be questioned.” ― Richard P. Feynman

    • @karlkarlsson9126
      @karlkarlsson9126 Год назад +20

      "Keep your friends close, but keep your enemies closer." - Tupac Shakur, 1996

    • @terrywilder9
      @terrywilder9 Год назад +63

      @@karlkarlsson9126 "Keep your friends close; but keep your enemies closer." - Sun Tzu 500 BC.
      So much for original thought!

    • @ijusttimetravel351yago2
      @ijusttimetravel351yago2 Год назад +2

      "Don't shoot at an enemy, shoot yourself"

    • @nunyabiz6952
      @nunyabiz6952 Год назад +2

      ​@@terrywilder9 👍🙄

    • @mikelbrenn111
      @mikelbrenn111 Год назад +14

      Wrong! Try questioning your wife's answers and tell her that she's wrong.

  • @AamirTime
    @AamirTime Год назад +40

    Just like Hubble, the JWST is paving the way for more discoveries. Bravo.

  • @johnralph2005
    @johnralph2005 Год назад +57

    The JWST is an amazing instrument of science

    • @yourlifeisagreatstory
      @yourlifeisagreatstory 8 месяцев назад +1

      If these are the type of discoveries it’s making now, imagine what the next telescopes we send out will reveal!

  • @dannyvegito6357
    @dannyvegito6357 Год назад +193

    Absolutely love the sincere enthusiasm from this lady that truly loves what she does.

    • @godoftestoe7956
      @godoftestoe7956 Год назад +1

      I fell in love with her

    • @rodgerrodger1839
      @rodgerrodger1839 Год назад

      ​@@godoftestoe7956 Me too. I'm glad someone else said it before me.

    • @tracytrawick322
      @tracytrawick322 Год назад

      ​@godoftestoe7956 Want me tell her? I'm sure she would be flattered!
      But I haven't seen her since.....🤔
      See, I'm her 14th cousin removed, and I heard she used an industrial eraser.
      But time heals all wounds, so no problem! 😂

    • @USA92
      @USA92 Год назад

      As the son of scientists and a person aware of the problems of the world i can unequivocally tell you this is what happens when life and fellow humans are not viewable in a telescope.

    • @VG-rj8pn
      @VG-rj8pn Год назад +1

      Its useless.

  • @jasontempleton2445
    @jasontempleton2445 Год назад +552

    The average person hates being wrong, but scientists are just as excited at being wrong as finding out they're right. Wish every job was like that.

    • @coffeetalk924
      @coffeetalk924 Год назад +40

      at least science is self correcting, unlike religion

    • @InfraRedNeck
      @InfraRedNeck Год назад +46

      Except when it involves pandemics.

    • @shanrobinson4329
      @shanrobinson4329 Год назад +24

      There not all exited about being wrong..

    • @reidsimonson
      @reidsimonson Год назад +8

      It’s massively problematic. So many policies are created based off of these wrong things. It has to be a more we don’t know so we can’t make any certain decisions over it. The age of the universe is still unknown regardless what these egotistical wannabe monoliths say.

    • @reidsimonson
      @reidsimonson Год назад

      @@coffeetalk924 masks, vaccines, social distancing, pretty much everything. Also, what’s funny about that is they never had any science on those things to begin with and just did.

  • @AstronomyGuru84
    @AstronomyGuru84 Год назад +23

    This is the part of science that I love. Discovery!

  • @Stamnoso
    @Stamnoso Год назад +22

    I love how her expression is so full with genuine excitement

    • @abkxx
      @abkxx Год назад

      She look at the right way .....she is lying 😅

  • @JT-zh1oz
    @JT-zh1oz Год назад +172

    I love her genuine child like enthusiasm - now that is unfiltered love and passion for one’s work …happy for her …

    • @fleshborg
      @fleshborg Год назад +9

      Its an act... she too knows it's all BS

    • @manuell3505
      @manuell3505 Год назад +3

      The narrator is suspicious. Is this a jehovahs witnesses end boss?

    • @johnjohanson643
      @johnjohanson643 Год назад +5

      Of all the possibilities she states that we need to look at the timeline of galaxy formation. I think there are many things we need to rethink.

    • @WhiteDove73-888
      @WhiteDove73-888 Год назад +5

      She’s lost it

    • @alexdorian336
      @alexdorian336 Год назад +10

      ​@@fleshborg I'm pretty sure voices in your head have very funny stories lol 😅

  • @SeanMontie
    @SeanMontie Год назад +10

    I remember when we discovered black holes at the center of every galaxy. It was a huge discovery and we had to revise our text books in school. This is the great thing about science, it isn't afraid of updating as new information becomes confirmed.

    • @isaacmoore6803
      @isaacmoore6803 Год назад +2

      Unfortunately all the Bible thumpers in this comment section can’t seem to grasp that.

    • @svenmorgenstern9506
      @svenmorgenstern9506 Год назад +1

      Sure makes the textbooks expensive, though. 😮

    • @Nameentered
      @Nameentered Год назад

      ​@isaacmoore6803 Well, here's the thing bro bro. Us bible thumpers don't need to change anything because we got it right the first time. Can't fix something that isn't broken. Why only Christians? What about Judaism, Muslims, Buddhism reincarnation, Taoism, Hinduism, Rastafari, Scientology, Science, and all the other religions that are out there? Yeah I said science, and that's because science is starting to become cult like where you ignore facts and go off of feelings

    • @danhtran6401
      @danhtran6401 Год назад +3

      😂...the bible is not a science book even though Jesus did defy gravity. The Bible hasn't been changed since the dead sea scrolls and people are still reading it long after graduation. I bet you, once they make a bigger telescope, science books will be changed again. Until then, don't be pounding your chest too hard....

    • @Damon970
      @Damon970 Год назад

      ​@@svenmorgenstern9506That's not what makes them expensive. Greed is!

  • @Superman_Not_Clark_Kent
    @Superman_Not_Clark_Kent Год назад +94

    We're still infants looking around and not really understanding what we're looking at. We've revised before, and we'll have to revise again.

    • @bobmusil1458
      @bobmusil1458 Год назад +10

      Science makes progress, that’s the reason science is so effective

    • @PrinceBlake
      @PrinceBlake Год назад +1

      @@bobmusil1458 There is something called religious dogma and scientific dogma. Both are an insult to dogs and humans.

    • @PrinceBlake
      @PrinceBlake Год назад +1

      @@bobmusil1458 Yes, I would agree. And at that location where Science and Religion intersect, Mother Nature and Father Time just gave science a booster shot.

    • @bobmusil1458
      @bobmusil1458 Год назад +4

      @@PrinceBlake Dogma is at the centre of all religions.
      Dogma is a contradiction to the core ideas of science.

    • @Ana_crusis
      @Ana_crusis Год назад +3

      That's how science progresses

  • @dliap98
    @dliap98 6 месяцев назад +4

    i genuinely love how astronomers get excited by every new thing they learn. they are so aware that everything they predict to be true could actually be different from what they thought, and they never claim to definitively know all the answers. they're just so hyped to discover new things

  • @coffee1207
    @coffee1207 Год назад +63

    JWST is absolutely amazing 👏🏽

    • @shangrilaladeda
      @shangrilaladeda Год назад +1

      It’s garbage

    • @ronleight9341
      @ronleight9341 Год назад +3

      ​@@shangrilaladeda Projecting again, i see.

    • @shangrilaladeda
      @shangrilaladeda Год назад

      @@ronleight9341 no I knew the universe looked like this when I was a child it’s nothing new to me common sense is the understanding of all things

    • @josephmayfield945
      @josephmayfield945 Год назад +1

      @@shangrilaladeda “I’ve never touched a breast.”

  • @humanrightsadvocate
    @humanrightsadvocate Год назад +101

    Imagine that, no matter how far back in time you look, you see galaxies and more galaxies.

    • @DamonW95
      @DamonW95 Год назад

      Dude imagine the possibility of other life forms! 😭❤️

    • @melaniestarkey7868
      @melaniestarkey7868 Год назад

      You live on a planet and if you go to another planet you're an alien. There's billions of them out there you really think there's only you. On top of that look how small you are on this planet called Earth and you can stick a million earths inside the sun. Put the sun next to the largest Star wow it disappears. And you think you know everything!

    • @smmfdftbh
      @smmfdftbh Год назад

      It wouldn't be possible, because at one point after the big bang, the universe was just darkness. There was no light, and nothing to see. If we have a telescope strong enough, and soon enough, we may possibly see this period of darkness

    • @humanrightsadvocate
      @humanrightsadvocate Год назад +2

      @@smmfdftbh We already see galaxies that should not even exist. Galaxies with old stars in the early universe. That doesn't add up.

    • @tracytrawick322
      @tracytrawick322 Год назад +1

      ​@@humanrightsadvocateThe equation keeps changing.
      And it's the time factor.
      No time to be doodling around! 😂

  • @meltedmarshdaddy
    @meltedmarshdaddy Год назад +4

    Advancements in the study of quantum mechanics are what is truly going to unlock the secrets of the universe.

  • @XX-iv2wu
    @XX-iv2wu Год назад +216

    Imagine a universe so awesome that it creates its own audience to wonder in awe of it.

  • @MegaBladerunner007
    @MegaBladerunner007 Год назад +48

    Her genuine enthusiasm for her work is charming.

    • @censored4christ162
      @censored4christ162 Год назад +3

      I dont trust her

    • @earlaweese
      @earlaweese Год назад

      *You have sense.*@@censored4christ162

    • @intensity75
      @intensity75 Год назад

      I actually completely disagree… This is a learned behavior. Those in the know, know that, if you don’t come with this energy, you will quickly be an outsider

  • @deadliftD
    @deadliftD Год назад +14

    None of the women in my physics graduate school looked like that.

    • @ivanfrancocaceres14
      @ivanfrancocaceres14 Год назад +2

      😂😂😂👍

    • @Bo-dachious
      @Bo-dachious 10 месяцев назад +1

      She is a gorgeous looking lady. 🌹

    • @Phatal001
      @Phatal001 5 месяцев назад +1

      White?

    • @Gump327
      @Gump327 4 месяца назад

      I didn't have any in my PhD toaster repair class either

  • @MrDlt123
    @MrDlt123 Год назад +123

    "They say the Universe is expanding. That should help with traffic." - Steven Wright

  • @uzerp9lite
    @uzerp9lite Год назад +58

    You can see the spark of excitement, enthusiasm and passion in her eyes as she bubbled on about the subject... I think there's no doubt that this lady loves what she's doing in her work.

    • @bolivianbillionaire1349
      @bolivianbillionaire1349 Год назад +3

      sad day when she wakes up to the fact that the only thing nasa has taken into space is her imagination....

    • @lazertroll702
      @lazertroll702 Год назад +4

      ... like a _bubbling_ brook ... 😶

    • @bow_wow_wow
      @bow_wow_wow Год назад +3

      She looks like positively villainous.

    • @uzerp9lite
      @uzerp9lite Год назад +2

      @@bow_wow_wow well, then... I guess any villain who's passionate about the work they do would make a great villain if nothing else... hmm... 🤔

    • @chetsenior7253
      @chetsenior7253 Год назад +2

      What does passion have to do with unbiased observation??

  • @NoeLuna-cd4dy
    @NoeLuna-cd4dy 3 месяца назад +2

    She’s beautiful

  • @googleevil9553
    @googleevil9553 Год назад +111

    It will never end. The end.

    • @jmpsthrufyre
      @jmpsthrufyre Год назад +1

      Fini
      Roll credits scores

    • @savage22bolt32
      @savage22bolt32 Год назад +1

      And while we're revising things, let's take another look at ancient earth history. Why are the rocks in Peru just like rocks all over the planet and nobody can tell us how they were formed & placed?

    • @teddlyt
      @teddlyt Год назад +1

      Best comment ever!

    • @adamburling9551
      @adamburling9551 Год назад +1

      yep. They're gonna look at look and never see what they're hoping to see.

    • @Smiley957
      @Smiley957 Год назад +1

      @@savage22bolt32 Because they are rocks.

  • @cubbyfan777
    @cubbyfan777 Год назад +17

    The sheer enthusiasm and genuine love for the Universe and her field of work that gleams from her eyes is infatuating ❤

    • @chetsenior7253
      @chetsenior7253 Год назад

      But has nothing to do with unbiased observation.

  • @catmandont100
    @catmandont100 Год назад +161

    The true beauty in discovery is first learning you were wrong....and so the journey continues.
    Be wrong more...........knowledge requires it.

    • @Bobsquash1
      @Bobsquash1 Год назад +3

      Try telling that to Zahi Hawass

    • @catmandont100
      @catmandont100 Год назад

      @@Bobsquash1 ...He's got enough problems, with muzzzies breathin' down his neck.

    • @everettpadgett862
      @everettpadgett862 Год назад +6

      Trust the science...
      Science changed...
      But, trust us this time...

    • @tims8603
      @tims8603 Год назад +7

      @@everettpadgett862 That's the beauty of science. When new data comes in, it is revised or changed. We don't know everything and, probably, never will. As we learn, our knowledge increases.

    • @musica0220
      @musica0220 Год назад +1

      @@everettpadgett862 it’s never ending process, humanity knows little compare to how long we exist and how old the universe is

  • @johnappleseed9290
    @johnappleseed9290 Год назад +50

    Imagine the advanced civilizations that have evolved BILLIONS of years ahead of us..

    • @nephilim1337
      @nephilim1337 Год назад +3

      Even just 10,000 years is plenty.

    • @thebotlobbydaily
      @thebotlobbydaily Год назад +3

      Or after
      At that point time kind of doesn’t exist and becomes a meaningless figure , as it truly is.

    • @CraigBass-p6e
      @CraigBass-p6e Год назад +2

      It's a paradox tho looking 10 billion light years away is looking at that planet 10 billion years ago same with them looking at us so ya sucks alot will be changed in the coming years

    • @Nameentered
      @Nameentered Год назад +1

      You can imagine it all you want. Doesn't make it true. That's like saying imsgine unicorns pooping rainbows

    • @johnappleseed9290
      @johnappleseed9290 Год назад

      @@Nameentered Wrong. because mathematically speaking with how vast the universe is taken to account there is NO way there can be other life than ourselves? So you’re wrong, unless you have full blown evidence which I’m sure you don’t it continues to be a possibility.
      Imagine unicorns pooping rainbows? I think you’re a bit confused referencing that statement into mine.

  • @kenhutchenson5994
    @kenhutchenson5994 Год назад +30

    I wish other areas of learning wouldn't hold on so tightly to their current understanding. Rewrites are examples of learning and understanding new things.
    Way to go Webb!

    • @Spencer-4
      @Spencer-4 Год назад +2

      Like religion and spirituality?

    • @Maincoonlover254
      @Maincoonlover254 Год назад +1

      ya like the Bible, rewritten many many times, very good source to trust 😂

    • @ReluctantPost
      @ReluctantPost Год назад

      Rewrites can also be examples of, say, authoritarianism in its many forms or other agendas wanting to amend and control a historical narrative for their own protection or benefit.

    • @ReluctantPost
      @ReluctantPost Год назад

      @@Maincoonlover254 🙄

  • @tazguy371
    @tazguy371 Год назад +4

    Someday, they'll put a couple or more big telescopes in orbit around the Sun, effectively creating a telescope the size of the Earth's orbit.

  • @aethrya
    @aethrya Год назад +54

    Love this woman's bright spirit and childlike innocence and sense of wonder and curiosity. Easy on the eyes too.

    • @ronaldblackburn8947
      @ronaldblackburn8947 Год назад +1

      And I thought that I was the
      only one!

    • @d00mf00d
      @d00mf00d Год назад +2

      Thank God she's easy on the eyes otherwise you'd never pay attention to what she's saying.

    • @billaddington831
      @billaddington831 Год назад +2

      She is totally cute and super smart. What a catch for some lucky man

    • @billaddington831
      @billaddington831 Год назад +1

      @@ronaldblackburn8947 Oh no. Welcome to the club.

  • @newatlantisrepublic6844
    @newatlantisrepublic6844 Год назад +11

    We just simply unlocked more dlc to the universe.

  • @johnpublic976
    @johnpublic976 Год назад

    Great Stuff! We will be revising our knowledge of the Universe and Physics for many years going forward! Love the Excitement!

  • @aclogarta
    @aclogarta Год назад +19

    Once we have a bigger telescope, I bet there's more beyond those galaxies...

    • @christopherbramwell8262
      @christopherbramwell8262 Год назад +1

      It seems so. It's speculation. Yet, the possibility of 5 undiscovered galaxies seems exciting. MORE OBSERVATIONS ARE NEEDED AND SOME THINGS HAVE TO BE CONFIRMED.

    • @truhartwood3170
      @truhartwood3170 Год назад

      All this new discovery is is like knowing when someone is born, seeing how fast they grew from 4 onwards, and extrapolating that growth rate back to when they were born. Then you see baby photos and realize that they actually grew faster at the beginning than what you thought. It's not actually a huge deal.

    • @paysour3
      @paysour3 Год назад

      What you have discovered is that big bangs are occurring all across the universe. Whenever matter enters a black hole it exits as a big bang somewhere else. These black holes eject all of the solar ingredients for the formation of a entire universe. The exit point for this ejected matter is determined by the density of dark matter in Infinity.
      Those Distant universes that you see were here when the Big Bang occurred in this region of the space-time continuum.

    • @paysour3
      @paysour3 Год назад

      @@christopherbramwell8262 What you have discovered is that big bangs are occurring all across the universe. Whenever matter enters a black hole it exits as a big bang somewhere else. These black holes eject all of the solar ingredients for the formation of a entire universe. The exit point for this ejected matter is determined by the density of dark matter in Infinity.
      Those Distant universes that you see were here when the Big Bang occurred in this region of the space-time continuum.

    • @TheYolo20
      @TheYolo20 Год назад +1

      @@paysour3The first part is nothing but speculation not even a hypothesis. The second part is just wrong

  • @JakeEpooh
    @JakeEpooh Год назад +10

    I love the joy and sheer pleasure she takes in what she and her team are doing.

  • @tampazeke4587
    @tampazeke4587 Год назад +14

    That's the beauty of science. As more discoveries are made updates and reassessments are made. Science doesn't dig in it's heels and say, "NO, I REFUSE TO BELIEEEEEEEVE!"

    • @floridanews8786
      @floridanews8786 Год назад +3

      It does though.

    • @tampazeke4587
      @tampazeke4587 Год назад +4

      @@floridanews8786 If it does it ain't SCIENCE!

    • @UnskilledGrappler
      @UnskilledGrappler Год назад

      * cough * fauci * cough *

    • @tankwfw
      @tankwfw Год назад +1

      Its also one of the traps of science. We're sure what we believe now is right, but the future might dramatically alter that.

    • @tampazeke4587
      @tampazeke4587 Год назад

      @@tankwfw NO real scientist ever says that they're sure that what we believe now is right and there's no chance that future discoveries could never alter that. They don't even say that about evolution or gravity or E=mc2.

  • @Baskerville1000
    @Baskerville1000 Год назад +6

    It would be a huge discovery. Impressive work, thank you for sharing!

  • @sj-30000
    @sj-30000 Год назад

    Wow. We're constantly re-evaluating what we thought about the universe every time our technology improves.
    That means that the universe is a lot bigger than we originally thought 🤯

  • @jimparsons6803
    @jimparsons6803 Год назад +6

    'New instruments lead to new findings --- Dr. Tyson.' Late Night. I am reminded of Galileo Galilee.

  • @robertmedeiros5112
    @robertmedeiros5112 Год назад +17

    I love it! More people need to truly understand space and how small we are

    • @FUYT888
      @FUYT888 Год назад +1

      Really! Please tell us more Captain Obvious!

    • @farhanmalik4027
      @farhanmalik4027 Год назад

      Really 😂 scientist take Uturn everyday

    • @Nameentered
      @Nameentered Год назад

      Why? We live life on planet Earth. Something billions of light years away doesn't affect us in any way nor will it ever affect us.

  • @martykardaseski7590
    @martykardaseski7590 Год назад +1

    Asumeness! What a discovery!

  • @thescarletandgrey2505
    @thescarletandgrey2505 Год назад +67

    “All scientific knowledge is subject to change. Even science laws.” - Neil DeGrasse Tyson. 🙄

    • @britishrocklovingyank3491
      @britishrocklovingyank3491 Год назад +6

      That is the beauty of science.

    • @charlesritter6640
      @charlesritter6640 Год назад +10

      Except when it comes to Covid apparently

    • @britishrocklovingyank3491
      @britishrocklovingyank3491 Год назад

      @@charlesritter6640 Explain.

    • @BrandonFuller-kw3gv
      @BrandonFuller-kw3gv Год назад +4

      ​@@charlesritter6640 let me guess.. you think it was all a hoax/conspiracy theory...

    • @charlesritter6640
      @charlesritter6640 Год назад

      @@britishrocklovingyank3491 DOCTORS were NOT ALLOWED to question the official narrative when it came to ALL things covid. If Doctor Fauchi said something was true then it was true according to the media and anyone saying anything different from that is a "conspiracy theorist " and a liar and should have their medical license revoked. Does that sound familiar now?

  • @myaccount6487
    @myaccount6487 Год назад +7

    I believe in Infinity. I’m sceptical about the “big bang” theory. If these new discoveries turn out to be what they appear to be then it’s got to be infinity time and space.

    • @fluentpiffle
      @fluentpiffle Год назад

      spaceandmotion
      wave structure of matter

    • @pappi8338
      @pappi8338 Год назад +1

      You can have infinite space in a finite point. Take Calculus

    • @myaccount6487
      @myaccount6487 Год назад +1

      @@pappi8338 if it is infinite then what we are observing is minuscule in the vastness of infinity. The fact that we see inflation could well be a wave in our part of the universe. A blip even. 🤷🏼‍♂️

    • @JustinMShaw
      @JustinMShaw Год назад +1

      @@myaccount6487 The universe can still be infinite with the Big Bang, and that's either with or without the Big Bang being a huge transition rather than an absolute beginning.
      If you throw it out entirely then you just create another huge headache of figuring out what the CMB is.

    • @myaccount6487
      @myaccount6487 Год назад

      @@JustinMShaw is the CMB not just what we can see and detect using our modern day equipment? The background of the inside of a tennis ball is not the whole picture. The light beyond the CMB has not and will probably not reach us.

  • @douglasgilchrist2316
    @douglasgilchrist2316 Год назад

    That's life understanding what we see in the diversity of thought and open-mindedness is key

  • @christophermorin4077
    @christophermorin4077 Год назад +13

    The very best part of science, saying your wrong and discovering new things!

  • @paulpratt
    @paulpratt Год назад +15

    Most folks think great discoveries are announced with "Eureka!" Nope, they are announced with "That's strange..."

  • @robertttttt716
    @robertttttt716 Год назад +2

    Or maybe the Galaxy is older than they think?

  • @rand49er
    @rand49er Год назад +12

    JWST is doing exactly what had been hoped. It is making new discoveries. This is exciting!

    • @Nameentered
      @Nameentered Год назад

      Yeah, nothing like making new discoveries that don't have an impact on us in any way, shape, or form.

    • @rand49er
      @rand49er Год назад

      @@Nameentered would you rather have all that money given away to temporarily elevate people economically while they waste their lives admiring pop culture? Pop culture is the real enemy. It does nothing to help anyone. That’s where your disappointment should be directed.

  • @meinbherpieg4723
    @meinbherpieg4723 Год назад +20

    It's as though millions of students cried out at once as their wrong answers became correct too late for the grades to count, and were suddenly silenced.

    • @UFwhoknOws
      @UFwhoknOws Год назад

      Science and technology go hand in hand, with evolution. Keeping it honest to a fault, is a moral badge of honor - By William Sundance 🙌✌️🫶

  • @glenn4412
    @glenn4412 11 месяцев назад

    Right answer!

  • @darkcaptain8030
    @darkcaptain8030 Год назад +24

    Pov : those aren't galaxies those are massive alien spaceship coming towards us

    • @donaldnewman4597
      @donaldnewman4597 Год назад

      Yes please

    • @ivaspasova
      @ivaspasova Год назад

      😂

    • @schloops8473
      @schloops8473 Год назад

      ... and they use solar systems as fuel :D

    • @peterparker9286
      @peterparker9286 Год назад +1

      ​@@schloops8473Uhhg 😢😮🎉

    • @Ryan_Christopher
      @Ryan_Christopher Год назад +1

      They are color red-shifted. That means they are receding from us at a fraction of the speed of light; very fast going away.

  • @ogenevieve
    @ogenevieve Год назад +11

    This is just another example of why I question everything. Even when ppl say, but it's science or math, im like idgaf, there's no way that we're so arrogant that we actually think we know everything!?

    • @garysnider5342
      @garysnider5342 Год назад +1

      Nope just you. Personal incredulity doesn’t solve anything. You may question everything due to your ignorance. You may perceive knowledge as arrogance. You probably also perceive the earth as flat. (it’s not)

    • @ogenevieve
      @ogenevieve Год назад +2

      @garysnider5342 Your assumptions about me may be wrong, but you might also be correct. A truly wise man knows he knows nothing at all. 🙏🏾

    • @shanen457
      @shanen457 11 месяцев назад +1

      Absolutely, especially when it comes to the study of creation by people who reject and deny a Creator (Intelligent designer of an intelligent design), you must always study their study because they have a presupposed timeline that is absurdly long, as they are learning.

  • @SuperBalkan1111
    @SuperBalkan1111 11 месяцев назад +1

    We have been revising the history of the universe since the beginning of man kind… the only thing certain about universe is all the details we know about it today will be eventually changed.

  • @wanderingknight10
    @wanderingknight10 Год назад +23

    Oh..We will just revise our understanding of the universe. You could just say that you don’t know how the universe was created then you wouldnt have to look like you didn’t really know in the first place.

    • @theuniversewithin2065
      @theuniversewithin2065 Год назад +14

      Huh? Nobody claimed to "know" in the first place. We operate within our best models and now we're getting new information to revise said models.
      And I hope you don't mean a "god" when you say the universe was "created".

    • @rouninpanda6318
      @rouninpanda6318 Год назад +2

      If only everybody was willing and able to revise their understanding of the universe...

    • @rouninpanda6318
      @rouninpanda6318 Год назад +3

      ​@@theuniversewithin2065 Of course they do. Didn't you know? Apparently, science must figure out every aspect of physics with 100% accuracy on the first hypothesis otherwise it's completely invalid and should be replaced by old tomes.

    • @theuniversewithin2065
      @theuniversewithin2065 Год назад +4

      @@rouninpanda6318 100% of what?? Any scientific model is a work in progress and will always remain so. We have a fairly good understanding about the coarse workings of the universe, but it'll be exciting to see what new science comes out of JWST. But as a whole we know almost nothing.

    • @rouninpanda6318
      @rouninpanda6318 Год назад +1

      @@theuniversewithin2065 I know that. But people like OP don't get it or don't want to get it.

  • @honodle7219
    @honodle7219 Год назад +4

    Our understanding is limited by how far we can see.

    • @blktarockstar818
      @blktarockstar818 Год назад

      There is a physical limit to how far we can see

    • @chetsenior7253
      @chetsenior7253 Год назад

      So a blind person understands nothing?? If one sense is how you experience the world, you are depriving yourself.

  • @DylansPen
    @DylansPen Год назад

    Nothing wrong with revising things as we learn more. That's what science is, uncovering reality and recording it just as it is.

  • @Jay-ft3xh
    @Jay-ft3xh Год назад +19

    Every generation has far too many people that believe they are living at the apex of human knowledge. They have all been wrong.

    • @blktarockstar818
      @blktarockstar818 Год назад

      Everyday you are living at the Apex of human understanding

    • @brendykes1202
      @brendykes1202 Год назад

      Your statement is wisdom encapsulated. It needs to be on posters and taught in schools.

  • @billschara5667
    @billschara5667 Год назад +22

    We are so arrogant that we think of this as something surprising. We know nothing. We just started exploring space, and in fact, havn't actually been there yet!

    • @geraldhowse8597
      @geraldhowse8597 Год назад

      You're absolutely correct.

    • @kedrednael
      @kedrednael Год назад

      Space is not like a black room. It's just extremely large and relatively empty. So we can see things that are very very far away.. We can see them in many wavelengths of light. So we can know quite a lot about it.

    • @adamburling9551
      @adamburling9551 Год назад

      ​@kedrednael We may very well be in a black room and not even know it. A black room with galaxies suspended inside.

    • @peterkilbridge6523
      @peterkilbridge6523 Год назад

      Not true. We have always been in space. Think about this if you can.

    • @billschara5667
      @billschara5667 Год назад

      @@peterkilbridge6523 and what part of space or how much space is that, exactly?

  • @tomscience274
    @tomscience274 Год назад +5

    That's what telescopes are for. To find things far away.

  • @aaronmicalowe
    @aaronmicalowe Год назад

    The current explanation is that time itself is warped over distances. So if our perception of time is even wrong, perhaps it only seems like everything is flying apart.

  • @michaelacosta393
    @michaelacosta393 Год назад +5

    What it proves... They don't know anything

    • @Spencer-4
      @Spencer-4 Год назад +1

      No. It proves that we keep learning. What’s the alternative? Stagnant religion?

    • @fluentpiffle
      @fluentpiffle Год назад

      They know plenty.. Their government funding simply doesn’t want YOU to know..
      spaceandmotion
      wave structure of matter

    • @truhartwood3170
      @truhartwood3170 Год назад +1

      This is just a minor tweak. It doesn't change anything about what we know happened, just that it happened a little quicker at the beginning than what we previously had evidence for.

    • @anthonylove5275
      @anthonylove5275 Год назад

      Exactly...I don't believe a word nasa says...

  • @michaelbuteau4183
    @michaelbuteau4183 Год назад +15

    I think the only thing scientists have figured out about the universe is that stars are pretty.

    • @raishallan
      @raishallan Год назад

      Its like God's own art to us!

    • @truhartwood3170
      @truhartwood3170 Год назад

      Uh.. No, to understand everything we know about the universe takes many years of dedicated study.

  • @bermandon
    @bermandon Год назад +2

    I changed my coffee- you can change astronomy.

  • @flashlight8530
    @flashlight8530 Год назад +6

    Truth is they have no real timeline for the formation of the universe because they don't know. If we can't see pass a point in space then we don't know the true size of the universe and what is behind the point to which we cant see

    • @kedrednael
      @kedrednael Год назад

      That's right. Based on what we see we can calculate the size of the observable universe. Beyond that it is going away from us faster than light, so it is impossible to receive light from it. But there's no reason to think it doesn't go on for much much further than the observable universe. This is what the scientists accept.

  • @dalenail4877
    @dalenail4877 Год назад +9

    The scientist can study space for millions of years and still not seen the end of the galaxy

    • @monza1002000
      @monza1002000 Год назад

      In millions of years, the only galaxy we could see will be our own milky way

    • @peterkilbridge6523
      @peterkilbridge6523 Год назад

      @@monza1002000 False

    • @peterkilbridge6523
      @peterkilbridge6523 Год назад

      False

    • @monza1002000
      @monza1002000 Год назад

      @peterkilbridge6523 So you are saying that, even though the universe is spreading out that we will never loss sight of it? I am sure scientists would love to know the physics behind your universe that is getting bigger and bigger yet will always stay in sight? Please explain, l would love to know myself

    • @truhartwood3170
      @truhartwood3170 Год назад

      What do you mean by "end"? As in it's death? Or the edge? Our galaxy (the milky way) will last for many billions of years. So no, scientists won't see its death. And no, we've only had telescopes for 400 years, not millions. If by "end" you mean "edge" then yes, we have seen that and massively way for beyond that. We can see trillions of galaxies beyond our own. The galaxies mentioned in this video are over 13 billion light years away. Our galaxy is only about 100,000 light years across, so extremely close by comparison.

  • @brentknudson9131
    @brentknudson9131 2 месяца назад

    I'm thankful for this,😊

  • @edtorres5889
    @edtorres5889 Год назад +3

    Yahweh is eternal and so is the universe

  • @BillySBC
    @BillySBC Год назад +15

    Damn that's a cute Astrophysicist!

  • @SCVIndy
    @SCVIndy Год назад +1

    The Webb telescope is awesomely

  • @Echo4Bravo
    @Echo4Bravo Год назад +5

    The Q Continuum is back at it again.

  • @KIRKW-jc8ej
    @KIRKW-jc8ej Год назад +1

    Wow ! Understandably exciting YES , how I find this discovery ! Yes

  • @RimiD1
    @RimiD1 Год назад +4

    When will we learn everything?...😇

  • @michaelcaron7659
    @michaelcaron7659 Год назад +10

    Your gonna have revise a lot of things because there’s a lot of things we really don’t know yet Lol

  • @PeterSedesse
    @PeterSedesse Год назад +1

    In science, the most exciting phrase is " huh, well thats weird ".

  • @FiloYappins
    @FiloYappins Год назад +9

    The more they learn the less they know…….

    • @Justmekpc
      @Justmekpc Год назад +1

      No the more they learn the more questions there are It wasn’t that long ago people thought the sun rotated around the earth

    • @crash4dafun
      @crash4dafun Год назад +2

      That’s what happens when you explore something infinite

    • @dennissettlemyre917
      @dennissettlemyre917 Год назад +2

      Science just tries to find the answers. They’re willing to admit when they’re wrong. Unlike other people who just ignore the horrible stuff in their books 😂

    • @FiloYappins
      @FiloYappins Год назад

      @@dennissettlemyre917 🤦🏽‍♂️

    • @عبداللهالمسلم-ن3ض
      @عبداللهالمسلم-ن3ض Год назад +1

      وما اتيتم من العلم الا قليلا. صدق الله العظيم.

  • @mathieuvanleeuwen7127
    @mathieuvanleeuwen7127 Год назад +6

    The size of the telescope's mirror determines the size of the universe. No end in sight. Accept it ...

    • @peterkilbridge6523
      @peterkilbridge6523 Год назад

      False

    • @mrdave777
      @mrdave777 Год назад +1

      @@peterkilbridge6523 So you disagree with the original comment. Yet offer no reasoning or subjective commentary. Excellent job! Your opinions really stand out!

    • @robertjohnson4401
      @robertjohnson4401 Год назад

      ​@@peterkilbridge6523A conversation ender like that is an indicator of a small mind. The original comment here has validity based on the progression from Hubble to Webb telescope.

    • @peterkilbridge6523
      @peterkilbridge6523 Год назад

      @@robertjohnson4401 The size of the mirror determines its ability to collect more light; hence, Webb collects more light than Hubble. True. But do not neglect to point out that Webb's key advantage is its vastly greater ability to collect light in the deep red and infrared; this enables it to observe far-distant galaxies that are greatly red-shifted. My earlier comment was objecting to the claim that the size of the telescope determines "the size of the universe"; this was not well said.

    • @robertjohnson4401
      @robertjohnson4401 Год назад

      @@peterkilbridge6523 When the original poster made his comment, you took it literally. He was using hyperbole. What he was stating was as our telescopes get more powerful, it has a maximum distance it can peer. That maximum distance can be considered, using hyperbole, the size of the universe (to us). Similarly, as we employ a more powerful telescope our universe "gets bigger", hence our telescope determines the size of the universe.

  • @Gorgeous_Genesis
    @Gorgeous_Genesis Год назад

    You still have to revised it more than 100 or more times or more to fully understand the the universe. Hubble Space Telescope, and James web Telescope is just touching a small percent from truly understanding the universe. We think we know it all but we still learning from mistakes we make from previous telescopes.

  • @bobby123321bvbv
    @bobby123321bvbv Год назад +9

    Hopefully James Webb will put a rest to the big bang and be labeled what it really is, the big bust.

    • @histreeonics7770
      @histreeonics7770 Год назад

      There is zero data so far from JWST to suggest that there is anything wrong with the Big Bang theory.
      Predictions of a few things have been found to be in error, and those predictions have many *untested* assumptions in them. We will now change our assumptions until our predictions match the data from JWST, and hope that in the process we find a rational reason for why the newer assumption works.

  • @johnkirk3279
    @johnkirk3279 Год назад +1

    why do so many people think the big bang was the beginning of the universe.? I believe it was just an event in the universe, not the beginning. The universe is infinite. There is no beginning and no end.

  • @Jay-nh5od
    @Jay-nh5od Год назад +4

    Timelines for everything always gets pushed back. They simply don’t know.

    • @blktarockstar818
      @blktarockstar818 Год назад +2

      No they base everything on evidence, when nee evidence is obtained you change the model to match the evidence

    • @bobcooter
      @bobcooter Год назад

      @@blktarockstar818 Then you can use this evidence to prove the universe is 14.5 billion years old not 13.7, it's more definitive now.

    • @truhartwood3170
      @truhartwood3170 Год назад

      ​@@bobcooter the new discoveries have done nothing to change the age of the universe, only how quickly stars and galaxies formed in the early universe. It's quite a small change in the grand scheme of our understanding of the Universe.

  • @drewmurdaugh6264
    @drewmurdaugh6264 Год назад

    It's pretty obvious that the universe is a lot bigger than we can actually observe. And since space itself is still expanding and these galaxies are traveling away from us at roughly the speed of light then there is galaxies out there that are literally beyond the point of being observed.

  • @tonylamontbillings6607
    @tonylamontbillings6607 Год назад +4

    You can't put an age on the universe. We're just guessing.

    • @shamrock5725
      @shamrock5725 Год назад +2

      Depends on what you mean by "universe" and what you meant by "guessing". Everything is a very well educated guess that is backed by experimenting, and well verified facts about how our isolated universe works to have a pretty good idea.

    • @mab0738
      @mab0738 Год назад

      @@shamrock5725 still a guess at the end of the day

    • @shamrock5725
      @shamrock5725 Год назад

      @@mab0738 as my previous statement stated and agree that although it is a guess it is far better than just an assumption.

  • @TheNativeTwo
    @TheNativeTwo Год назад +6

    Or… it’s a huge discovery that they are wrong….

  • @carmelita9396
    @carmelita9396 2 месяца назад

    We don’t know EVERYTHING so revising is expected. The thing that scares me are the departments that never revise anything.

  • @stevemilk5523
    @stevemilk5523 11 месяцев назад

    I love how we constantly find out new things that prove we are wrong but science is sooo headstrong and unwilling to accept alternatives views during the times “in between” and call anyone a conspiracy theory believers until “science” is ready to admit they were wrong! It’s so counterintuitive!

  • @ShannonSmith4u2
    @ShannonSmith4u2 Год назад

    That's why I HATE seeing that show called "How the Universe works" because it isn't how it works and they'll change everything they say in a year or two. Love this lady's excitement and enthusiasm about this new discovery!

  • @stuartgoswell1193
    @stuartgoswell1193 Год назад

    Omg her hair is just GAWWWJUSSSS!!!

  • @Eyedunno
    @Eyedunno Год назад

    I forgot who I heard point this out, but religion and other ways of thinking based on tradition see the fact that scientific understanding changes as a sign on weakness. It's actually a sign of strength--science gives us new information, and our understanding is revised to fit the new, better information, making our picture of the world more accurate (or at least more useful).

  • @rooftopcat1785
    @rooftopcat1785 11 месяцев назад

    Yes, we need this information it could be bang on.

  • @frederickheard2022
    @frederickheard2022 Год назад

    They were using an assumption about the background energy of the universe (what is currently the microwave background radiation) that didn’t account for the larger energy of the earlier universe (we’ve all spread out and cooled down since then). So, basically the data was correct and the ordinary model for galaxy formation was correct but one of the assumptions the team was using to match the data with the model had to be revised (at which point the new data fit the old model).

  • @josecantu2808
    @josecantu2808 11 месяцев назад

    Yeah, she said it right they just assume now they’re getting the facts that has happened quicker than what they think pretty soon. We are gonna see them galaxies. The universe is too enormous. It’s mind blowing.

  • @xWESTICLESx
    @xWESTICLESx 6 месяцев назад

    It’s time to revise because mainstream understanding of human history, science and the universe falls way short.

  • @ScottSchell-f1l
    @ScottSchell-f1l 11 месяцев назад

    Thank God she's the only one on here talking about this the rest can't get over their egos of being so wrong for so long

  • @Cornbread-gi6kt
    @Cornbread-gi6kt Год назад

    Galaxy’s are everywhere throughout the entire outer space. Galaxy’s aren’t localized into just a simple universe but are forever expansive. There is no beginning and no end to the measure and the number of galaxies.

  • @JamesThomas-pd3ck
    @JamesThomas-pd3ck Год назад

    The more you know the more you know you don't know... Because The more you know... The more you realize there is so much that you don't know.... And become humbly astonished...

  • @Grapecrush808
    @Grapecrush808 11 месяцев назад

    So happy it’s soo huge!!!

  • @nickburleson3312
    @nickburleson3312 Год назад

    It proves it doesn't fade out it just keeps going it's not flat the universe the earth everything has always been everything will always be ..that is the faith

  • @taipan8021
    @taipan8021 Год назад

    Rightttt. What would Humans be without assumptions and speculations?

  • @SuperGarden78
    @SuperGarden78 11 месяцев назад

    That's perhaps the border where one universe ends and one (ours) begin. If stars form and die, universes must do the same.

  • @lhomme38
    @lhomme38 Год назад +1

    Does the timeline for Big Bang, currently at 13.7B years, also become questionable?

  • @evelierlocket
    @evelierlocket Год назад

    If more mass means time goes slower, could it be possible that that beginning went super slow while parts of it were potentially fast?