More VSauce please! His Videos are always really interesting... For example "Did people used to look older?", "Illusions of time", " or "How many holes does a human have?"
Another suggestion: "Timelapse of the entire universe" and "Timelapse of the future" by Melodysheep, in this order! Or any Symphony of Science videos from them, which are pretty cool as well
Yea so as far as I know, most of the information in the video is still all accurate to our current understanding. Aside from the bookshelf, Interstellar got it spot on because Christopher Nolan worked extremely closely with Kip Thorne, a theoretical physicist who's an expert in black holes. He was basically a co-director in the way that if the visuals of the black hole weren't accurate to his calculations the visual effects team had to go back and fix the error. The image of the black hole in Interstellar is a legitimate simulation running on the most advanced and accurate calculations. I think maybe the one thing that has at least been discussed is maybe you wouldn't see the universe shrink behind you. Also another reason to admire Interstellar is that when the real images of the black holes M87 and then later SgrA* came out, you could compare them against the movie black hole and see very similar structures which lends credibility to Kip Thorne's depiction. Sure the real images are really blurry, but if you know what to look for you can see it.
I was already a fan of your channel because of the George Carlin reactions. I have now subscribed because of this video. I love that there are younger people who are interested in astronomy/astrophysics.
Thank you! It was my mother who got me into astrophysics and podcasts, and I never looked back. It's fascinating, and I like to think learnign about it keeps your way active in a bit of a different way than usual daily activities do, even if I can't always 100% grasp the science behind it.
I recommend The Battle of Midway 1942: Told from the Japanese Perspective (1/3) and The Battle of the Coral Sea 1942: The First Aircraft Carrier Battle in History . I think you will enjoying it’s
More VSauce please! His Videos are always really interesting...
For example "Did people used to look older?", "Illusions of time", " or "How many holes does a human have?"
I loved how smoothly he explained eveyrthing, I'll definitely look into him some more. I am terrified at the holes one hahah
@@WW-Reactions Haha :D It's not as bad as it seems... Actually, pick any video from VSauce - you cannot go wrong! ;)
Another suggestion: "Timelapse of the entire universe" and "Timelapse of the future" by Melodysheep, in this order! Or any Symphony of Science videos from them, which are pretty cool as well
Yea so as far as I know, most of the information in the video is still all accurate to our current understanding. Aside from the bookshelf, Interstellar got it spot on because Christopher Nolan worked extremely closely with Kip Thorne, a theoretical physicist who's an expert in black holes.
He was basically a co-director in the way that if the visuals of the black hole weren't accurate to his calculations the visual effects team had to go back and fix the error.
The image of the black hole in Interstellar is a legitimate simulation running on the most advanced and accurate calculations.
I think maybe the one thing that has at least been discussed is maybe you wouldn't see the universe shrink behind you.
Also another reason to admire Interstellar is that when the real images of the black holes M87 and then later SgrA* came out, you could compare them against the movie black hole and see very similar structures which lends credibility to Kip Thorne's depiction. Sure the real images are really blurry, but if you know what to look for you can see it.
More Vsauce, please! Top tier brain food on this platform.
I was already a fan of your channel because of the George Carlin reactions. I have now subscribed because of this video. I love that there are younger people who are interested in astronomy/astrophysics.
Thank you! It was my mother who got me into astrophysics and podcasts, and I never looked back. It's fascinating, and I like to think learnign about it keeps your way active in a bit of a different way than usual daily activities do, even if I can't always 100% grasp the science behind it.
I recommend The Battle of Midway 1942: Told from the Japanese Perspective (1/3) and The Battle of the Coral Sea 1942: The First Aircraft Carrier Battle in History . I think you will enjoying it’s
i recommend standupmaths as a maths channel
Very educational video👍