To _try_ and get some perspective on what a "Trillion" represents, I offer you this: 1 million seconds = about 11 days. 1 Billion seconds = about 32 YEARS. 1 *_TRILLION_* seconds .. would take you back in time to ~30,000 B.C.
My brain forces me to stop thinking at such a scale. It’s like it tries for a moment, starts to see it, almost pictures it, then my head hurts and my eyes tear up and my brain goes completely blank.
Good , it's the same as when we look at images of stars or galaxies. If you reduced average stars to size of a grain of sand the average distance between them would be 5 miles.
@/THE-X-Force 1 billion seconds are ~32 Years yeah, but shouldn't 1 trillion seconds be 32*1000 = 32000 years approx, so it would take us back to ~30,000 BCE right?
Hey, Thoughty2. I've been watching your videos for years now. I dont think I've ever commented (im quite a quiet chap). I just wanted to say thanks for all the entertaining information and hours and hours of videos. A cup of tea and one of your videos always uplift my day ❤
Am I the only one who hears him saying “ hey there “42” here 😅 Instead of thoughty2 😅 I thought it was a punny name based on 42 being a big deal as it’s the answer to the universe 😅
@@Noqtis don’t be a bitch to someone being kind and expressing gratitude . . Being brave and real enough to express himself and reach out to his hero 🦸♂️ than you just shit all over it that makes you a dime a dozen in the comment section and him a rare bird 🦅 so even if thoughty2 doesn’t notice him. We have. We also noticed you now and we weren’t as impressed on your addition to this conversation. 🔥 🔥 🔥 🎤 💧 🔥 🔥 🔥
@@Hippy_rocker_poper You are not 'we'. You are 'you'. People who speak of themselves as 'we' are as pathetic as OP is. No one cares here about your imaginary friends, which you include when you talk about yourself, buddy. No wonder, you came to his defense, people of the same kind stick together. In this case: Pathetic people.
These are my favorite Thoughty2 videos. Ones about space, planets, the search for life in our universe. They give me inspiration to look forward to getting older, to seeing how many more amazing discoveries we uncover in this lifetime…. Thank you Thoughty2 🙏🏼
Hey Thoughty2, it's been awhile since since I've seen anything from you on here, glad this one popped up when it did. I love the way you present the ideas and concepts in these videos, and the topics themselves are always very deep and interesting. On that note, my daughter is 17 and is becoming increasingly curious about this sort of thing. I personally have a deep love for cosmology, quantum effects, and the like. It's the science of reality, or how we study the building blocks of existence, as I'm fond of saying. So naturally, the more she hears and learns the more she comes to me and we engage in very long, deep rooted & complex conversations about what is and could be. It's always better when you have someone to share your interests with, or even just an objective outside opinion. We just talked about this exact topic a few days ago, but of course I didn't have the numbers off the top of my head, so this came at great time. I've shared the video with her, and told her to look at more of the content you've produced on similar subjects. Long story, sorry.Really just trying to say thank you, & I'm a big fan, & that this stuff helps hold our little family together. Stay thoughtful my friend
Incorrect is far too lazy He may be one of the more powerful gods of destruction but He also Lazy the explanatory power of your hypothesis is lacking 🤓
some are due to natural happenings (dunno ..supernovas pushing planets out of orbits), others "artificially".., it was said the Anunnaki (or their ancestors) had "tablets of power" that could alter the projection of planet orbitals? (used to push planets out of orbits, as an ultimate weapon of terror?..)
When we talk about things being unlikely, I think the sheer scale of the universe handles that easily. When we talk about trillions of planets over the course of tens of billions of years, it feels like almost any chance outcome should happen, and happen quite often. Take into account how many more years the universe has ahead of it...
Yes, it is an argument from incredulity fallacy. We don't know how likely life is to form, we only have one example. Saying life came from another source just kicks the can down the road. We still want to know how life formed.
@@RendaJane The Flat Earth is the universe and man is the centre of God's creation. The retarded spinning ball Earth was a globalist conspiracy against God in order to make Christians look like lunatics.
I just want to say these videos have helped me immensely. Been struggling a lot with daily life, for a rather long time, I'm still fighting the good fight; but these topics let me get out of myself for a bit and leave certain headspaces behind. I discover much grander perspectives and broader perceptions. I can see all the wonder, humor and intrigue of an array of subjects and experiences that illuminate the wider scope of life and not just what I see from my little window of simply trying to function in society. And all that is very much appreciated
This type of reasoning and logical discussions merging the realms of science metaphysics and speculation is the way forward. We need these discussions in school not just memorising concepts in a textbook as facts and leaving no space for discussion. Natural curiosity should be preserved.
_"Your world exists in an area of congregation, an area that has many inhabited worlds. You do not see this within your own Solar System, but beyond your Solar System, this is most certainly true. You do not live in a sparsely populated part of the universe. You do not live in a region that is uncharted and unknown to others. This gives you certain disadvantages because your world is being scrutinized by many powerful forces. They are seeking an Intervention now because humanity has reached a point in its development where it has built an infrastructure that other races believe they can use for themselves."_ *The Allies of Humanity, Book Two* (free online)
The term "Solar System" is derived from our Star (the Sun), which is named "Sol"... so ALL other planetary systems would be "Star Systems", or named after that planetary system`s parent Star... i.e. Rigel System, etc.
It really irks me when these "infotainment" channels use incorrect terms, like calling all stars a "Sun", or all star systems "Solar Systems". Sun, Sol, and Solar are names specifically unique to OUR star system. Using those names to describe other systems and stars dumbs down our language, and to me it indicates I'm just watching another RUclipsr churning out monetized garbage that they are parroting from another source, while likely having little understanding of the material.
@@BigUncleHeavy I agree completely!!! One incorrect phrase that makes me cringe is when a seismic quake on Mars is referred to as an "Earthquake"! Another incorrect phrase used by many people is "dark side of the moon"!
No one can fathom just how vast the universe really is. It would take 100,000 light years to travel all the way from one end of the Milky Way to the other. Now, there’s a galaxy that would take 9 BILLION light years to do the same…and that’s just ONE galaxy 😮💨
Thanks for the video!! I always look forward to seeing a new one from you!! I have Long Covid and try to do quizzes to help keep my brain functioning with the brain fog. I always try to give you credit for getting a question right!! So thanks for all the great content. And your book, Stick a Flag in It, I’ve listened to it at least 4 or 5 times on audible. ❤
Maybe it was originally "Where have 2 Trillion Dollars gone" but Donald Rumsfeld wasn't available for an interview so they made it about planets instead.
One of my top 3 RUclips choices for learning new facts (easily half my screen time), and given that you're up there with Tasting History with Max Miller and PBS Eons, I hope you understand you are doing an awesome job and I'd really like you to keep doing it for a very long time.
It could be. It's weird how oumuamua made a turn to leave our solar system. Suggesting we have been under observation the whole time. Oumuamua could have been an advanced observatory type craft.
I love your videos! I always learn so much watching you and always makes me want to learn to more!!! So thank you Thoughty2 for your wonderful insight on all things interesting ❤😊
The only reason we think rogue planets can't have life is because we have only us to go off of. If life is out there it likely will be forged by planetary conditions be it a hot Jupiter or a frozen rogue planey.
humans are very 'human-centric'. we used to think that Earth was the center of the Universe. turns out - we inhabit some random arm of the Milky Way galaxy. not even a very noteworthy arm of the Milky Way galaxy. the Milky Way is in no way a 'noteworthy' Galaxy in our Universe. humans are prone to being narcissistic and self-centered (thankfully not everyone is like that)
@herbiegoesbananas3807 so its a 0 in multi trillion chance simple life is possi...... oh wait?! I seem to recall a chunk of MARS a couple billiin years old happened to have bscteria on it!
It would, but it would probably use different chemistry. Or not. Chemical processes depend on both temperature and pressure, like the video points out (you can have liquid water at 800 degrees Celsius if the pressure is high enough). Though, it's interesting to think about an organism with a plutonium shell that swims inside a pool of iron.
@@brianjohnson5272 Oh wait. You only read headlines. Perhaps you haven't heard: a study led by the Carnegie Institution for Science's Andrew Steele has debunked the notion that the organic compounds in the rock are evidence of ancient Martian life. The study found that the carbon-rich compounds are actually the result of water, most likely salty or briny water, flowing over the rock for a prolonged period.
Great video Thoughty. The sheer numbers are truly mind boggling. You went off on quiet a tangent with the evolution of life in our universe. The missing planet phenomenon can exist within the creation view as well, something you didn't mention. I'm surprised you didn't mention the most famous missing planet of all, Nibiru!
Certainly an interesting idea and does nicely close up the Panspermia concept. I'll also note, that even if humanity was stuck on Earth till the sun was going to explode, it does give us the idea of editing our species to be able to survive in a different atmosphere, make our own atmosphere MUCH denser, and intentionally Y33T ourselves away from our host star, relying on this Rogue Planet concept to survive as a species. That said, if we last even a few hundred more years we will be more than advanced enough to go just about anywhere we want in the galaxy, never mind the billions of years from now in this hypothetical Y33Ting.
First of all, I believe it is much more likely for life to evolve on the moons of ice giants and gas giants than on planets. This is particularly true with rogue planets. Additionally, it is unlikely that any life that did evolve on a rogue planet would escape from that planet as it passed through a planetary system,. OTOH, it would be relatively easy for asteroids, comets, etc, to dislodge life from a moon. Having stated this, are rogue planets planets? Dwarf planets are not planets because they do not clear their orbits. Since a rogue planet does not have an orbit, it can not possibly clear its orbit.
Mrs Richards: "I paid for a room with a view !" Basil: (pointing to the lovely view) "That is Torquay, Madam ." Mrs Richards: "It's not good enough!" Basil: "May I ask what you were expecting to see out of a Torquay hotel bedroom window ? Sydney Opera House, perhaps? the Hanging Gardens of Babylon? Herds of wildebeest sweeping majestically past?..." Mrs Richards: "Don't be silly! I expect to be able to see the sea!" Basil: "You can see the sea, it's over there between the land and the sky." Mrs Richards: "I'm not satisfied. But I shall stay. But I expect a reduction." Basil: "Why?! Because Krakatoa's not erupting at the moment ?"
Back when I was a kid, there were only 9 planets know in all of existence. Now we know of thousands. It was 1992 when the first planet was detected anywhere other than our solar system. Then as recent years came, they started turning up in their thousands with better orbiting space telescopes.
My kids and I absolutely LOVE your videos -- thank you for being YOU, and making all of the wonderful content! Please know you're very much appreciated in our home.☺
All the people complaining about the AI-generated thumbnails are actually more irritating than the thumbnails themselves! It's a cheap and easy way for content-creators to market their videos with uniquely-created art, thus lowering the cost of producing said video. It's not going anywhere anytime soon, so just get over it or unsubscribe. In any case, shut up!
The current implication of ai goes beyond lowering the costs, that's what they want you to believe only. It's actually a small part of a sinister agenda to dumb down the human creative power and increase the technology dependency for the sake of transhumanism. That's my good will to help your discernment, but I'm fine if you reject it.
One problem, the sun allows for liquid oceans. Without it, there's little more than ice fissures around any vents, incredibly minute space for life to form and thrive.
While panspermia is a fascinating idea it still leaves me wanting to know how did life form on these rogue planets, comets, asteroids, etc...? We currently have some hypotheses but no definitive answers. If life didn't originate on our planet then how did it form out there and why there and not here? Panspermia adds a lot more variables to consider.
the alien coo at 3:28 really caught me off guard lol i tilted my head and opened my eyes not entirely unlike my dog does when she thinks she hears the word "dog park"
Mental health is important . . . OR . . . get a pint of peach schnapps, pop a can of cinnamon buns and dose them with the schnapps before you slide into the toaster oven Great for curing cabin fever
Thank you, great job, great subject, rarely covered and its my favorite type of content, past-educational correction. PS no mustache, the shadow looks good man!
So the lowest freezing point of a liquid is helium with a freezing point of -452.2 F so in essence a rouge planet above this temperature with a highly thermal center and frozen outer crust could host life but it would not be carbon based life, it would have to be be denser (more than likely a known carcinogen) in order to breath hydrogenated or nitrogenated helium gas. The denser a lifeform is the more gravity it would need, so we should be looking for a rouge planet that is about -400 F with all the chemical elements and an abundance of helium and silicon that has a magma and iron core like ours that is spinning 3-4 times faster than Earth.
The thickness of atmosphere required could possibly go toward solving the Fermi Paradox, as it would make getting off their planet several magnitudes more difficult.
Love your videos took a break and now im back you and the why files and info graphics show are the best RUclips channels for knowledge and interesting things
It is videos like this that help keep me humble about my intellectual capacity. Not because of the nature of its content or the information that it presents us with, but because while everyone else is discussing such matters in the comments section I remain mesmerized by the phrase **unseemly planet yeeting behavior** 🤣
Star dies, or expires a bunch of its mass, it no longer has the same gravitational pull and its plants wander off. I’d always assumed that, and moons and planets being knocked out of stable orbit by meteors, comets or other rogue planets like space snooker, would be the primary ways planets wander off. Or slightly unstable orbits becoming more unstable over time, like how our moon is moving away from Earth by about an inch per year. On a long enough timeline it will no longer be in an orbit around us and will bumble along looking for another celestial body to crash into and/or orbit.
But what if there is another species out there that does not rely on anything to survive? Just because we haven't seen one like that doesn't mean that they don't exist. Another planet may have entirely different rules of life than our own. Lol I asked this before finishing the video which is literally saying this, nvm.
I recall a story I listened to a while back where humanity had beamed a message out into the stars to a nearby star system using an advanced form of the SETI transmitter that exists in real life, only to get a message back in Morse code telling them to be quiet since “They” are listening, with the implication that something bad was actively hunting civilizations throughout the universe. Pretty sure that was either Dark Somnium who narrated it or MrCreepypasta, but this video reminded me of it for some reason.
The assumption that water drinking, carbon-based, O2 breathing creatures (like us) are out there is biased beyond reason. "Now, my own suspicion is that the universe is not only queerer than we suppose, but queerer than we can suppose..." JBS Haldane
The 1951 film "When Worlds Collide" posits that a rogue star and planet enters our solar system and eventually the star collides with Earth. Some people travel to the new planet, which had hosted life previously, and it settles into a stable orbit around our sun.
Rare earth theory says there’s a lot more factors into getting life. Like having a moon, tectonic plates, Jupiter protecting us, magnetic field and so on there’s so many factors to add. Life especially intelligent life is going to be ultra rare.
To _try_ and get some perspective on what a "Trillion" represents, I offer you this:
1 million seconds = about 11 days.
1 Billion seconds = about 32 YEARS.
1 *_TRILLION_* seconds .. would take you back in time to ~30,000 B.C.
My brain forces me to stop thinking at such a scale. It’s like it tries for a moment, starts to see it, almost pictures it, then my head hurts and my eyes tear up and my brain goes completely blank.
I'm about 2.16 Billion Seconds old and counting.
Good , it's the same as when we look at images of stars or galaxies. If you reduced average stars to size of a grain of sand the average distance between them would be 5 miles.
And what’s the US national debt…..like forty trillion?
@/THE-X-Force 1 billion seconds are ~32 Years yeah, but shouldn't 1 trillion seconds be 32*1000 = 32000 years approx, so it would take us back to ~30,000 BCE right?
Hey, Thoughty2. I've been watching your videos for years now. I dont think I've ever commented (im quite a quiet chap). I just wanted to say thanks for all the entertaining information and hours and hours of videos. A cup of tea and one of your videos always uplift my day ❤
That’s ok cool
2000 comments. I'm sure he arrives any time in this comment section to thank you personally for the sub and watch time.
Am I the only one who hears him saying “ hey there “42” here 😅
Instead of thoughty2 😅
I thought it was a punny name based on 42 being a big deal as it’s the answer to the universe 😅
@@Noqtis don’t be a bitch to someone being kind and expressing gratitude . .
Being brave and real enough to express himself and reach out to his hero 🦸♂️ than you just shit all over it
that makes you a dime a dozen in the comment section and him a rare bird 🦅 so even if thoughty2 doesn’t notice him. We have. We also noticed you now and we weren’t as impressed on your addition to this conversation.
🔥 🔥 🔥 🎤 💧 🔥 🔥 🔥
@@Hippy_rocker_poper
You are not 'we'. You are 'you'. People who speak of themselves as 'we' are as pathetic as OP is.
No one cares here about your imaginary friends, which you include when you talk about yourself, buddy.
No wonder, you came to his defense, people of the same kind stick together. In this case: Pathetic people.
These are my favorite Thoughty2 videos. Ones about space, planets, the search for life in our universe. They give me inspiration to look forward to getting older, to seeing how many more amazing discoveries we uncover in this lifetime…. Thank you Thoughty2 🙏🏼
joepedochrome%
Hey Thoughty2, it's been awhile since since I've seen anything from you on here, glad this one popped up when it did. I love the way you present the ideas and concepts in these videos, and the topics themselves are always very deep and interesting.
On that note, my daughter is 17 and is becoming increasingly curious about this sort of thing. I personally have a deep love for cosmology, quantum effects, and the like. It's the science of reality, or how we study the building blocks of existence, as I'm fond of saying. So naturally, the more she hears and learns the more she comes to me and we engage in very long, deep rooted & complex conversations about what is and could be. It's always better when you have someone to share your interests with, or even just an objective outside opinion.
We just talked about this exact topic a few days ago, but of course I didn't have the numbers off the top of my head, so this came at great time. I've shared the video with her, and told her to look at more of the content you've produced on similar subjects.
Long story, sorry.Really just trying to say thank you, & I'm a big fan, & that this stuff helps hold our little family together. Stay thoughtful my friend
Lord Beerus is obviously to blame for the missing planets.
Trump's fault, according to liberal scientists
Incorrect is far too lazy He may be one of the more powerful gods of destruction but He also Lazy the explanatory power of your hypothesis is lacking 🤓
some are due to natural happenings (dunno ..supernovas pushing planets out of orbits), others "artificially".., it was said the Anunnaki (or their ancestors) had "tablets of power" that could alter the projection of planet orbitals? (used to push planets out of orbits, as an ultimate weapon of terror?..)
When we talk about things being unlikely, I think the sheer scale of the universe handles that easily. When we talk about trillions of planets over the course of tens of billions of years, it feels like almost any chance outcome should happen, and happen quite often. Take into account how many more years the universe has ahead of it...
But we have the only flat planet in the universe!
🎉
Yes, it is an argument from incredulity fallacy. We don't know how likely life is to form, we only have one example. Saying life came from another source just kicks the can down the road. We still want to know how life formed.
@@RendaJane With 4 elephants holding it up and we're all riding on the back of a giant space turtle named The Great A'Tuin 😂
@@RendaJane The Flat Earth is the universe and man is the centre of God's creation.
The retarded spinning ball Earth was a globalist conspiracy against God
in order to make Christians look like lunatics.
😂👍
I just want to say these videos have helped me immensely. Been struggling a lot with daily life, for a rather long time, I'm still fighting the good fight; but these topics let me get out of myself for a bit and leave certain headspaces behind. I discover much grander perspectives and broader perceptions. I can see all the wonder, humor and intrigue of an array of subjects and experiences that illuminate the wider scope of life and not just what I see from my little window of simply trying to function in society. And all that is very much appreciated
bless bless
Keep your chin up joness
@@RAGNAAAA 🥹🥹
Hang in there and keep moving forward.
@@RandianaJoness honestly. Have you got a support network? 😊
this an why files are my favourite channels atm. keep up the good work thoughty, and thankyou 👊🏼
Joe Scott is very similar as well. Highly recommend
This type of reasoning and logical discussions merging the realms of science metaphysics and speculation is the way forward. We need these discussions in school not just memorising concepts in a textbook as facts and leaving no space for discussion. Natural curiosity should be preserved.
Hey, Thoughty2. I've been watching your videos for years now. I just want to say these videos have helped me immensely
_"Your world exists in an area of congregation, an area that has many inhabited worlds. You do not see this within your own Solar System, but beyond your Solar System, this is most certainly true. You do not live in a sparsely populated part of the universe. You do not live in a region that is uncharted and unknown to others. This gives you certain disadvantages because your world is being scrutinized by many powerful forces. They are seeking an Intervention now because humanity has reached a point in its development where it has built an infrastructure that other races believe they can use for themselves."_
*The Allies of Humanity, Book Two* (free online)
Our universe is clearly part of and connected to some sort mainframe I think.. what's the mainframe is the real question
Always love it when he talks about space and history
Too bad he simplies things and draws assumptions on hypotesis abit to much in space videos.
So like every single video 😭
My grade school teachers thought I'd grow up to be an Astronaut. They told my Mom I took up space in their classrooms...
The term "Solar System" is derived from our Star (the Sun), which is named "Sol"... so ALL other planetary systems would be "Star Systems", or named after that planetary system`s parent Star... i.e. Rigel System, etc.
It really irks me when these "infotainment" channels use incorrect terms, like calling all stars a "Sun", or all star systems "Solar Systems". Sun, Sol, and Solar are names specifically unique to OUR star system. Using those names to describe other systems and stars dumbs down our language, and to me it indicates I'm just watching another RUclipsr churning out monetized garbage that they are parroting from another source, while likely having little understanding of the material.
@@BigUncleHeavy I agree completely!!! One incorrect phrase that makes me cringe is when a seismic quake on Mars is referred to as an "Earthquake"! Another incorrect phrase used by many people is "dark side of the moon"!
We're currently living in Yourmom System.
Thank you for all the amazing content you and your team provide. It's truly remarkable and gives a whole new perspective to life.
No one can fathom just how vast the universe really is. It would take 100,000 light years to travel all the way from one end of the Milky Way to the other. Now, there’s a galaxy that would take 9 BILLION light years to do the same…and that’s just ONE galaxy 😮💨
Frozen and irradiated planets don’t exactly sound like my first vacation choice..
Maybe not for us but just imagine a form of life that adapted to that kind of environment
Upside? No germs.
Wdym those sound so comfy 🥶
@@HonkeyKongLiveYep…..Free Of Irksome Humans!😂
But you haven’t ruled them out, they’re just not your first choice.
Thanks for the video!! I always look forward to seeing a new one from you!! I have Long Covid and try to do quizzes to help keep my brain functioning with the brain fog. I always try to give you credit for getting a question right!! So thanks for all the great content. And your book, Stick a Flag in It, I’ve listened to it at least 4 or 5 times on audible. ❤
Long covid?? Lol. If you never heard of that ridiculous concept, you would never feel like you "have" it. It's all in your head.
Been watching for years at this point
Always love your videos
Please keep them coming
I cant believe I only just figured this out but, Thoughty2, 42. 42 is the the Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe, and Everything.
Keep it up Aaron, you have one of the best youtube channels! Love your work.
good work on these videos man, they are both informative and fun to watch
Your humour is why I keep coming back to your videos, Thoughty2. It gets me every time. 😂
Yeh that’s gonna b a classic . “ if that doesn’t blow your mind, I’m worried that you don’t have a mind to blow” 😮😂😂
What do you mean they are missing!? Is the universe collapsing!? 😮
Yess atleast for me universe is collapsing 😢😢
yes
the universe is not collapsing. Ukraine is
Why does the title say "2 Trillion Planets Have Gone Missing and We Don't Know Why" when that was nothing about it
I call clickbait.
Maybe it was originally "Where have 2 Trillion Dollars gone" but Donald Rumsfeld wasn't available for an interview so they made it about planets instead.
2 trillion planets are not accounted for in our tally of planets in the galaxy because we've been overlooking just how many rogue planets exist.
Because you didnt watch beyond 2:50
@@irishwristwatch2487facts these folks be wondering about the wrong stuff sometimes.
They're not missing. They're just out, chilling. Literally. More or less.
Thank you Arran. You really crushed it this year. Here's to 2024 being even more stellar of a year. 🍻
One of my top 3 RUclips choices for learning new facts (easily half my screen time), and given that you're up there with Tasting History with Max Miller and PBS Eons, I hope you understand you are doing an awesome job and I'd really like you to keep doing it for a very long time.
I recommend „PBS space time”, „Anton Petrov”, „SEA”, „Astrum”, and „Cool Worlds” for space related videos
Cool worlds. JMG. Many good out there.
@@NullScar in this strange world, in which we liiiiiiiiveee. Love JMG!
@@CamMackay96 Probably my favourite RUclipsr. Have a good daaaaay.
You're a great guy!
Keep making content!
You are also a great guy 👍
And your also a great guy
And your also a great guy
Nothing but awesome people here!
It could be. It's weird how oumuamua made a turn to leave our solar system. Suggesting we have been under observation the whole time.
Oumuamua could have been an advanced observatory type craft.
Man haven’t heard “hey foughty two here” in a while. Nice to be back!!
I love your videos! I always learn so much watching you and always makes me want to learn to more!!! So thank you Thoughty2 for your wonderful insight on all things interesting ❤😊
Everytime I watch a Thoughty2 video I always end up thinking the same thing - "How come I haven't heard of this before!?"
reason will be: because of religion and western narcissist politicians
Yeah and even if we did it's no where near as clearly explained as a thoughty2 vid
The only reason we think rogue planets can't have life is because we have only us to go off of. If life is out there it likely will be forged by planetary conditions be it a hot Jupiter or a frozen rogue planey.
humans are very 'human-centric'. we used to think that Earth was the center of the Universe. turns out - we inhabit some random arm of the Milky Way galaxy. not even a very noteworthy arm of the Milky Way galaxy. the Milky Way is in no way a 'noteworthy' Galaxy in our Universe. humans are prone to being narcissistic and self-centered (thankfully not everyone is like that)
So we have no reason to think there is life outside of Earth.
@herbiegoesbananas3807 so its a 0 in multi trillion chance simple life is possi...... oh wait?! I seem to recall a chunk of MARS a couple billiin years old happened to have bscteria on it!
It would, but it would probably use different chemistry. Or not. Chemical processes depend on both temperature and pressure, like the video points out (you can have liquid water at 800 degrees Celsius if the pressure is high enough).
Though, it's interesting to think about an organism with a plutonium shell that swims inside a pool of iron.
@@brianjohnson5272 Oh wait. You only read headlines. Perhaps you haven't heard: a study led by the Carnegie Institution for Science's Andrew Steele has debunked the notion that the organic compounds in the rock are evidence of ancient Martian life. The study found that the carbon-rich compounds are actually the result of water, most likely salty or briny water, flowing over the rock for a prolonged period.
Still some of the best information in story form on the Internet! Keep up the great job!
Great video Thoughty. The sheer numbers are truly mind boggling. You went off on quiet a tangent with the evolution of life in our universe. The missing planet phenomenon can exist within the creation view as well, something you didn't mention. I'm surprised you didn't mention the most famous missing planet of all, Nibiru!
Certainly an interesting idea and does nicely close up the Panspermia concept. I'll also note, that even if humanity was stuck on Earth till the sun was going to explode, it does give us the idea of editing our species to be able to survive in a different atmosphere, make our own atmosphere MUCH denser, and intentionally Y33T ourselves away from our host star, relying on this Rogue Planet concept to survive as a species. That said, if we last even a few hundred more years we will be more than advanced enough to go just about anywhere we want in the galaxy, never mind the billions of years from now in this hypothetical Y33Ting.
we could do almost anything, if it wasn't for our war-mongering narcissistic corrupt politicians
First of all, I believe it is much more likely for life to evolve on the moons of ice giants and gas giants than on planets. This is particularly true with rogue planets. Additionally, it is unlikely that any life that did evolve on a rogue planet would escape from that planet as it passed through a planetary system,. OTOH, it would be relatively easy for asteroids, comets, etc, to dislodge life from a moon.
Having stated this, are rogue planets planets? Dwarf planets are not planets because they do not clear their orbits. Since a rogue planet does not have an orbit, it can not possibly clear its orbit.
A big "if" 😢
Not all life is 3D.
Our Sun isn’t going to explode. It isn’t massive enough to go Supernova. It’s just going to expand into Red Giant.
nice video, thank you! humans are not very good at 'thinking outside the box' we are usually very earth- and human-centric
Mrs Richards: "I paid for a room with a view !"
Basil: (pointing to the lovely view) "That is Torquay, Madam ."
Mrs Richards: "It's not good enough!"
Basil: "May I ask what you were expecting to see out of a Torquay hotel bedroom window ? Sydney Opera House, perhaps? the Hanging Gardens of Babylon? Herds of wildebeest sweeping majestically past?..."
Mrs Richards: "Don't be silly! I expect to be able to see the sea!"
Basil: "You can see the sea, it's over there between the land and the sky."
Mrs Richards: "I'm not satisfied. But I shall stay. But I expect a reduction."
Basil: "Why?! Because Krakatoa's not erupting at the moment ?"
Back when I was a kid, there were only 9 planets know in all of existence. Now we know of thousands. It was 1992 when the first planet was detected anywhere other than our solar system. Then as recent years came, they started turning up in their thousands with better orbiting space telescopes.
Thanks and keep up the good work, favourite youtube channel!
My kids and I absolutely LOVE your videos -- thank you for being YOU, and making all of the wonderful content!
Please know you're very much appreciated in our home.☺
you didnt count 2 trillion so how can you lose them? clickbait
Huh?
All the people complaining about the AI-generated thumbnails are actually more irritating than the thumbnails themselves! It's a cheap and easy way for content-creators to market their videos with uniquely-created art, thus lowering the cost of producing said video. It's not going anywhere anytime soon, so just get over it or unsubscribe. In any case, shut up!
The current implication of ai goes beyond lowering the costs, that's what they want you to believe only. It's actually a small part of a sinister agenda to dumb down the human creative power and increase the technology dependency for the sake of transhumanism. That's my good will to help your discernment, but I'm fine if you reject it.
Love your space videos, very informative and enjoyable!!!
Hey Thoughty2, great work as always and looking good dude!
never been this early 😂
Same
I gave you a down-vote for the clickbait title.
That's why I stopped watching years ago, all clickbait
@@daironlubian6250that's strange cause here is your comment
Well it's not click bait... technically but it's close
I disagree, the title seems fine to me. It relates to the content whereas for many videos that isn't true.
Please call it a dislike, this is youtube, not reddit
Now I will always think of rogue planets as F*** Boi planets spreading their seeds of life. Thank you.
As always quality content, really appreciated.
Thoughty2 - One the best long term channels I have been subscribed to ❤️
One problem, the sun allows for liquid oceans. Without it, there's little more than ice fissures around any vents, incredibly minute space for life to form and thrive.
While panspermia is a fascinating idea it still leaves me wanting to know how did life form on these rogue planets, comets, asteroids, etc...? We currently have some hypotheses but no definitive answers. If life didn't originate on our planet then how did it form out there and why there and not here? Panspermia adds a lot more variables to consider.
the alien coo at 3:28 really caught me off guard lol i tilted my head and opened my eyes not entirely unlike my dog does when she thinks she hears the word "dog park"
As a scientist, I find these ideas no more unlikely than some of the current views on dark matter & dark energy. Keep up the good work!
Mental health is important . . . OR . . . get a pint of peach schnapps, pop a can of cinnamon buns and dose them with the schnapps before you slide into the toaster oven
Great for curing cabin fever
Love your work keep it up!
Thank you I've been a subscriber for a very long time. You bring knowledge to many of us.
That was actually a great affiliate promo too, BTW. Not needing it right now, but it's a great idea! Thanks for sharing that.
Thank you for all of your hard work over the years
Thank you, great job, great subject, rarely covered and its my favorite type of content, past-educational correction. PS no mustache, the shadow looks good man!
2 trillion planets missing?
Someone in accounting really dropped the ball!
I had not been this excited about since I was a kid. I learned a lot through your video. Very cool.
I find your ideas intriguing and I wish to subscribe to your newsletter.
"If that doesn't blow your mind, I'm worried you don't have a mind to blow" epic statement is epic, this gets me all the time 😂
When I was a kid, I used to read fringe pseudo-science books from the 1970s about “Planet X” a rogue planet from 35k years ago.
So the lowest freezing point of a liquid is helium with a freezing point of -452.2 F so in essence a rouge planet above this temperature with a highly thermal center and frozen outer crust could host life but it would not be carbon based life, it would have to be be denser (more than likely a known carcinogen) in order to breath hydrogenated or nitrogenated helium gas. The denser a lifeform is the more gravity it would need, so we should be looking for a rouge planet that is about -400 F with all the chemical elements and an abundance of helium and silicon that has a magma and iron core like ours that is spinning 3-4 times faster than Earth.
Really Really Appreciate your work. Thank you
Thanks, your insights keep on being a surprise: always something new to learn.
The thickness of atmosphere required could possibly go toward solving the Fermi Paradox, as it would make getting off their planet several magnitudes more difficult.
Love your videos took a break and now im back you and the why files and info graphics show are the best RUclips channels for knowledge and interesting things
Thanks for this well balanced video which makes a lot of scientific sense... I'm a biologist and your video has given me a great deal to think about.
It is videos like this that help keep me humble about my intellectual capacity. Not because of the nature of its content or the information that it presents us with, but because while everyone else is discussing such matters in the comments section I remain mesmerized by the phrase
**unseemly planet yeeting behavior** 🤣
Gotta think about life beyond what we are told. Crystals are living also!
Thanks for what you do Thoughty2
Awesome theory, thanks as always for keeping us thinking and not just accepting.
Hope you keep smiling. Great work
Star dies, or expires a bunch of its mass, it no longer has the same gravitational pull and its plants wander off. I’d always assumed that, and moons and planets being knocked out of stable orbit by meteors, comets or other rogue planets like space snooker, would be the primary ways planets wander off.
Or slightly unstable orbits becoming more unstable over time, like how our moon is moving away from Earth by about an inch per year.
On a long enough timeline it will no longer be in an orbit around us and will bumble along looking for another celestial body to crash into and/or orbit.
Oh god the Daleks are at it again
Thoughty2 my favorite RUclips channel
This could be a problem.
Thanks - great channel.
But what if there is another species out there that does not rely on anything to survive? Just because we haven't seen one like that doesn't mean that they don't exist. Another planet may have entirely different rules of life than our own.
Lol I asked this before finishing the video which is literally saying this, nvm.
I don’t think they ever existed. At least what we thought them to be
I recall a story I listened to a while back where humanity had beamed a message out into the stars to a nearby star system using an advanced form of the SETI transmitter that exists in real life, only to get a message back in Morse code telling them to be quiet since “They” are listening, with the implication that something bad was actively hunting civilizations throughout the universe. Pretty sure that was either Dark Somnium who narrated it or MrCreepypasta, but this video reminded me of it for some reason.
That might be someone reading from The Three Body Problem. Great book series
Therapist for Christmas! What more can I ask for?
Love your videos, Mate.
OR.... Life as we understand it was Created by LIFE that we don't understand.
Great video as always I love this channel I always end up with more questions after watching one of these videos..Great stuff..
THANKYOU MATE. I LOVE UR CONTENT !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Somewhere out there, Davros is building another reality bomb.
Way to go, Thoughty. Obi Wan only managed to lose one.
The assumption that water drinking, carbon-based, O2 breathing creatures (like us) are out there is biased beyond reason.
"Now, my own suspicion is that the universe is not only queerer than we suppose, but queerer than we can suppose..." JBS Haldane
We can't even count 2 trillion planets... how the hell do we know they're missing?
Obviously, *we don't.*
A lot of great info was divulged in this video. Thanks 42
When you said “three ingredients” subtitles said “fre ingredients” lol 😂😂😂
please stop the AI thumbnails
Why?
@@L666ON its lame
Who cares….. I didn’t even think about the dang thumbnail….. just read title …
Also stop clicking AI thumbnails GENIUS !!! 😂
@@ryanheadden200 🤓☝🏻
It is "The Squire of Gothos" that is zipping around on his rough planet making life every where. 😂
The 1951 film "When Worlds Collide" posits that a rogue star and planet enters our solar system and eventually the star collides with Earth. Some people travel to the new planet, which had hosted life previously, and it settles into a stable orbit around our sun.
Rare earth theory says there’s a lot more factors into getting life. Like having a moon, tectonic plates, Jupiter protecting us, magnetic field and so on there’s so many factors to add. Life especially intelligent life is going to be ultra rare.
Thanks for another thought provoking video.