NASA Just Discovered A Planet That Defies All Logic!

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  • Опубликовано: 16 янв 2025

Комментарии • 7 тыс.

  • @kalebarancelovic
    @kalebarancelovic 2 года назад +14359

    An alien species 50 lightyears away making a video about Earth saying " it's a hellish planet made up of poisonous oxygen".

    • @theidealist1019
      @theidealist1019 2 года назад +1474

      Surely, when scientists search for 'planets which could harbour life', which contain water, are in the habitable zone, etc., they're really looking for ones that humans could live on? Almost any planet with sufficiently complex molecules could produce replicators, and they wouldn't have to use water or oxygen, or thrive in the same temperatures we do, or be carbon-based. They would be perfectly adapted to whichever conditions they evolved in.

    • @mojojojo6535
      @mojojojo6535 2 года назад +244

      @@theidealist1019 this is always what I say but not in as much depth

    • @antonironstag5085
      @antonironstag5085 2 года назад +1

      "Any intelligent life?"
      "Nope. Just a bunch of dumb ape things that kill each other over nonsense."

    • @alexc.3519
      @alexc.3519 2 года назад +156

      @@gruenergermane 😑

    • @Skillspreme
      @Skillspreme 2 года назад

      @@theidealist1019 Water is the best solvent that we can find. It dissolves everything, Stable at most temperatures, perfect pH to not rupture cells. So, it's perfect moderate for both Procratic and Ukratic cells which are bases for life( not going into this and that hypothesis which are yet to be proven). So, in short baseless theories vary Science doesn't.

  • @blesseddestiny7460
    @blesseddestiny7460 2 года назад +2618

    Till end of times there will remain millions of them undiscovered

    • @arliesam948
      @arliesam948 2 года назад +29

      Definitely

    • @nhibou7590
      @nhibou7590 2 года назад +85

      way more than that but yeah

    • @cinemartin3530
      @cinemartin3530 2 года назад +70

      As sad as it is to admit it, you're right. There are much more planets than the time and resources that humanity can afford.

    • @dr.ampofoemmanuel7301
      @dr.ampofoemmanuel7301 2 года назад +25

      According to the Holy Spirit there is a planet called the Green planet which is guided by an angel called vinegar yet to be discovered 🤔

    • @yamahakid450f
      @yamahakid450f 2 года назад +37

      To a point... there becomes a point due to the universe expanding at a faster rate than light, the light in areas yet to reach us will never be able to reach earth no matter how long we exist as a species.
      And many things we're able to see are already burned out or gone, it just hasn't reached us yet to let us know that's the case.... which is weird to think about, it's basically like looking into the past.

  • @l3ngl130
    @l3ngl130 2 года назад +2880

    I never wished to live forever. But whe I see videos like this, I'd love to be able to experience fast ways of space traveling in a distant future to see the beauty of space with my own eyes ...

    • @jimmyhudson3031
      @jimmyhudson3031 2 года назад +62

      I've heard that the recovered Alien Spacecraft being examined at Area 51 can travel at 100,000 times the speed of light. Of course, should this technology actually exist, then we go could navigate around the distant galaxies in a matter of minutes. Let's hope the rumors are true, and we can someday solve how they did it.

    • @markshepperson3603
      @markshepperson3603 2 года назад +278

      @@jimmyhudson3031 lol. You believe that? If you went that fast your mass would attract everything.
      I’m crying . 😩😩😩

    • @gristlevonraben
      @gristlevonraben 2 года назад +10

      I would love to see these too.

    • @awtismmaxxing
      @awtismmaxxing 2 года назад

      @@jimmyhudson3031 if you went that fast you would disintegrate into.. well nothing, you would literally delete urself from existence

    • @Gordon3840
      @Gordon3840 2 года назад +3

      Looks like a enormous watermelon

  • @wuhantv1117
    @wuhantv1117 2 года назад +18

    0:08 "Saturn on steroids"🫠

  • @toxic-brawlstars
    @toxic-brawlstars 2 года назад +3725

    I've always found it fascinating how diverse our universe really is and how much there could be to find!

    • @writerblocks9553
      @writerblocks9553 2 года назад +54

      the universe does hold everything that could possibly within it

    • @jennyanydots2389
      @jennyanydots2389 2 года назад +1

      It is fascinating isn't it? Just don't try and stop me from having an abortion whenever I want. It's my whole and I control what goes on down there, both in and out and I can have ten abortions a day if I want and you can't say shit about it pal. Maybe you should apologize to me? If you have the balls to respond that is.

    • @fireblade295
      @fireblade295 2 года назад +20

      The groundskeeper n ME2 said it perfectly, "the universe loves diversity."

    • @jennyanydots2389
      @jennyanydots2389 2 года назад +6

      @@fireblade295 But what about abortions? Do you know how cheap adrenochrome would be if having an abortion wasn't such a big deal?

    • @stronk9760
      @stronk9760 2 года назад +18

      Yeah it’s almost like they could make anything up and feed to it to people 👀👀

  • @roloyoung763
    @roloyoung763 2 года назад +3316

    Respect to the cameraman for going so far away from home just to bring us this footage

    • @StarSannu
      @StarSannu 2 года назад +142

      for real, he a homie

    • @chaddavid1037
      @chaddavid1037 2 года назад +138

      It was the same guy that filmed the moon landing......and the departure

    • @BabySerp
      @BabySerp 2 года назад +62

      Tbh cameraman jokes are dead and cringe at this point, just don't!

    • @doohickeydoohickey2441
      @doohickeydoohickey2441 2 года назад

      @@BabySerp Screw you, that is only you.

    • @yip383
      @yip383 2 года назад +143

      @@BabySerp 🤓

  • @tulikagupta21
    @tulikagupta21 2 года назад +2437

    Could you please also make an explainer video as to how scientists arrive at such details as to know how big the core of a distant planet is and what the color is etc??..

    • @jackrigsby6017
      @jackrigsby6017 2 года назад +367

      Light from stars behind it passing through the planet's atmosphere gives them the data.

    • @smthsmth
      @smthsmth 2 года назад +59

      Google it

    • @malakaspawt3190
      @malakaspawt3190 2 года назад

      videos like this never provide details on their evidence. it's not meant to tell you why, it's meant to tell you what to believe. Because..........wait for it........... Science is never wrong. *cough cough*

    • @singbluesilver1973
      @singbluesilver1973 2 года назад +424

      They don’t. It’s purely theoretical.

    • @TheSchiffReport
      @TheSchiffReport 2 года назад +31

      what end of times ? there are no end times

  • @whochecksthis
    @whochecksthis 2 года назад +114

    With wasp 76B having a tidally locked but massive wind and iron vapor raining on the dark side… wouldn’t the planet shift mass to the dark side, and eventually cause a mass shift, resulting in a tidal shift? So essentially having a “rotation” effect of centuries?

    • @fulloffreedomwr8948
      @fulloffreedomwr8948 2 года назад +10

      About that I wonder if the core of that planet is imbalanced and closer to the lighted side because of that.

    • @andyhunt8601
      @andyhunt8601 2 года назад +2

      I'd guess that it's a weird Shape!

    • @practical_theory
      @practical_theory Год назад +5

      Smart thought. I was just wondering about the same.

    • @evo6259
      @evo6259 Год назад +3

      i guess after raing down it flows towards the hot side to be evaporated again

    • @vineousvondrake2456
      @vineousvondrake2456 3 месяца назад

      it's likely that the vapor flows equally in both directions so it never unbalances if it does shift it would probably be by minute increments and would probably wobble back and forth

  • @coIibrx
    @coIibrx 2 года назад +1496

    Time stamps
    0:00 Intro
    1:32 GJ 504B - Pink planet
    2:05 Waterworld - W a t e r
    3:06 KEPLER-70b - Pretty hot-
    4:15 WASP-76b - Todoroki
    5:17 PSR J1719-1438b - Ex-star, very big
    6:01 PSRJ1719-1438b - Companion ⬆️
    6:55 WASP-107b - Cotton candy gas
    7:32 Gliese 581d - Big twillight zone 🌎
    8:44 2MASS J2126 - Lonely dude
    9:01 TYC 9486-927-1-Far companion ⭐
    10:17 PDS 70c - Exoplanet + disc moon
    10:45 KOI-5Ab - 3 stars, one exoplanet
    11:31 Outro
    I hope this was useful, it took 24 full minutes, I never saw timestamps in this video nor comments so I decided to create my own for those who wanted them. Bye!
    Edit: IT'S GONE PAST THE POINT WHERE I NEED TO LIKE MY OWN COMMENT LMAO 💀 TY

  • @theonlydinoshark9304
    @theonlydinoshark9304 2 года назад +1501

    Since there is supposedly an infinite amount of planets, it seems reasonable that an actual planet with the same elemental composition of a marshmallow, cold enough to keep the marshmallow solid, but warm enough to keep it spongy could theoretically exist. Meaning there could be billions of tons of marshmallow just floating in space

    • @ae3rxy899
      @ae3rxy899 2 года назад +67

      Marshmallows- in space?

    • @kelvinaustinkamultistreams3203
      @kelvinaustinkamultistreams3203 2 года назад +25

      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @Acudit
      @Acudit 2 года назад +29

      Dibs

    • @dragonleg8700
      @dragonleg8700 2 года назад +3

      🤔🤔🤔

    • @MistahJigglah
      @MistahJigglah 2 года назад +72

      There aren't "supposedly an infinite amount of planets" at least not in our universe.
      And outside of some limited theoretical string theory, as of now there's no observable evidence of a multiverse(though that doesn't mean there isn't one)
      And more than every grain of sand on a million dessert worlds, still isn't even close to infinite, no finite number is or can be.

  • @circadianizzy
    @circadianizzy 2 года назад +956

    Imagine a habitable moon orbiting an uninhabitable planet. That would be awesome.

    • @amvcentral9198
      @amvcentral9198 2 года назад +60

      So just yavin IV to yavin prime?

    • @AaaaaaaA-pl3zy
      @AaaaaaaA-pl3zy 2 года назад +79

      Apparently they look for moons more than actual planets and stuff because of some scientific reason. Idk been a while since I read about it

    • @Goldenkitten1
      @Goldenkitten1 2 года назад +121

      *Europa sits in the back being ignored:* Q_Q

    • @chasmai8423
      @chasmai8423 2 года назад +58

      @@AaaaaaaA-pl3zy thanks buddy, guess I'll just not google this fact you have stated but still one day repeat it at a dinner party as if I know it as fact

    • @HowlingWolf518
      @HowlingWolf518 2 года назад +68

      Europa, Titan, Enceladus, Endor, Pandora. It's more common than you'd think.

  • @ChazSmith
    @ChazSmith 2 года назад +68

    I genuinely wonder how much of this they actually got completely right. 🤔 There's no way all of this information could be accurate without being able to actually interact with the planets, right?

    • @johnjeribaring6955
      @johnjeribaring6955 2 года назад +6

      Yeah, You're right. Plus, how can it produce so much energy? Maybe because it is abundant of H and He and other elements? 🤔

    • @Tumanic1996
      @Tumanic1996 2 года назад +3

      I completely agreee

    • @sarcasticguy4311
      @sarcasticguy4311 2 года назад +5

      @Big Ste If I was "approximately right" at my job every day, people would be dead.

    • @thevoidstaresback2629
      @thevoidstaresback2629 2 года назад +1

      @@sarcasticguy4311 yeah, but this stuff is closer to meteorology on accuracy: they only need to be completely accurate if it’s imminently dangerous. Otherwise the can be a little off and its fine

    • @onemanarmy2595
      @onemanarmy2595 2 года назад

      true

  • @AlexUrzica
    @AlexUrzica 2 года назад +821

    Big thanks to the cameraman for all these great shots

    • @jennyanydots2389
      @jennyanydots2389 2 года назад +11

      He's not registered ya know

    • @mattsmith5421
      @mattsmith5421 2 года назад +17

      Aren't you original and witty

    • @Efthymis_TheBest
      @Efthymis_TheBest 2 года назад +9

      There's no cameraman dude

    • @jennyanydots2389
      @jennyanydots2389 2 года назад

      @@Efthymis_TheBest Bro of course there's a cameraman son how else do you think they got all those tight shots boy? I think you should apologize son. (_)_)::::::::::::D

    • @jennyanydots2389
      @jennyanydots2389 2 года назад +8

      @@mattsmith5421 Are you talking to me boy?

  • @Marvelsdisneydreamuniverse
    @Marvelsdisneydreamuniverse 2 года назад +368

    Our planets: Named after gods.
    Other Planets: Named after Wifi passwords.
    At least those weird planets still gives me hope that worlds from Star Wars like the vulcanic lava planet actually could exist.

    • @Dinoenthusiastguy
      @Dinoenthusiastguy 2 года назад +25

      Io, a moon of Jupiter, is pretty darn close!

    • @SweetColo
      @SweetColo 2 года назад +2

      Underrated comment!! 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @awtismmaxxing
      @awtismmaxxing 2 года назад +2

      @@Dinoenthusiastguy Ganymede

    • @eVill420
      @eVill420 2 года назад

      all you really need to do is give Venus more carbon dioxide, slightly more mass and move it closer to the sun, it'll stop being a temperate 500C and closer to hellish temperatures.

    • @Marvelsdisneydreamuniverse
      @Marvelsdisneydreamuniverse 2 года назад +7

      @@eVill420 kinda wonder what would do that to our sunsystem.
      Also kinda wonder if Venus was a little bit further fron the sun and had a moon would do to our sunsystem.

  • @kalebarancelovic
    @kalebarancelovic 2 года назад +437

    I find it difficult to get my head around how a teaspoon amount of a star's material can weight billions of tons

    • @Jim_Jones_Guyana
      @Jim_Jones_Guyana 2 года назад +242

      Maybe I can help you try to understand. It's because the material is so dense, due to the star's massive amount of gravity. Compare a shoe box full of air *VS* a shoe box full of gold. The box of air weighs 5 ounces. The box of gold weighs 375lbs. (because gold is much denser than air) The material in a neutron star is billions of times denser than gold. (& therefor billions of times heavier) I hope I helped you understand it a little better. 🙂

    • @kalebarancelovic
      @kalebarancelovic 2 года назад +51

      @@Jim_Jones_Guyana you explained it perfectly! Thank you!

    • @Kittsuera
      @Kittsuera 2 года назад +12

      i would imagine it would be something like. it doesnt fall to the earth from gravity. the earth falls up to it.

    • @dhimankalita1690
      @dhimankalita1690 2 года назад

      Stfu... NASA is a satanic organisation trying to corrupt our understanding of the universe
      The Bible already provides us the explanation of this beautiful creation
      So believe in Jesus Christ or else u will burn in hell

    • @jobdone3700
      @jobdone3700 2 года назад +39

      @@Jim_Jones_Guyana Its still incomprehensible that a billion tonnes of anything could be compressed down so small .

  • @kinglyzard
    @kinglyzard 2 года назад +122

    It would be awesome if they found relatively young earthlike exoplanets. We could perhaps observe abiogenesis in real time.

    • @childrey14
      @childrey14 2 года назад +9

      That would be one incredible discovery.

    • @rutrakainmeiez5107
      @rutrakainmeiez5107 2 года назад

      You could do shit NASA is the biggest frauds in history

    • @sulac4ever170
      @sulac4ever170 2 года назад +5

      I don't know about this "WE could observe it in REAL TIME" ... more like thousands of generations of humans could look at their current (in real time / in a human lifetime for nearly all of its duration very static looking) snapshot of the million years long and painfully slow process of biogenesis (and all the captured footage from their ancestors in all their different stages of technology to their individual points in time).

    • @kinglyzard
      @kinglyzard 2 года назад +1

      @@sulac4ever170
      Yes, we can map and even control our evolution thru behavior and technology.
      But abiogenesis, life from organic molecules, is a different ballgame altogether. Even if we were to discover an array of worlds in various stages of abiogenesis, we still wouldn't know as much as we know about evolution today.

    • @rutrakainmeiez5107
      @rutrakainmeiez5107 2 года назад

      NASA defies all logic

  • @sarthaksharma_3771
    @sarthaksharma_3771 2 года назад +279

    Still blows my mind how vast the universe is and how undiscovered it is

    • @downyourtube
      @downyourtube 2 года назад

      Please come see my featured video and let me show you something very special concerning what I found on a map!

    • @CCABPSacsach
      @CCABPSacsach 2 года назад +8

      @@downyourtube Explain why.

    • @thefpvlife7785
      @thefpvlife7785 2 года назад +6

      We can't even begin to imagine how vast the multiverse really is.

    • @GhostoftheTenthEye
      @GhostoftheTenthEye 2 года назад

      Its the last frontier

    • @brazil3207
      @brazil3207 2 года назад +3

      @@thefpvlife7785
      according to all known AND PROVEN laws of physics a multiverse should be impossible.

  • @JakeLovesCoffee
    @JakeLovesCoffee 2 года назад +247

    strange to think that somewhere out there right now a civilization living on a doomed planet could be getting wiped out by some sort of cosmic calamity like a blackhole or a supernova

    • @barryroth7122
      @barryroth7122 2 года назад +25

      There is a short story about a priest who comes to the realization that the star which supposedly indicated the birth of Christ, was a supernova which probably wiped out billions of people. and we celebrate that event (which happened 100s of million years before Christ. ( Called "A Case of Conscience")

    • @jerrscott6373
      @jerrscott6373 2 года назад +6

      I seriously doubt that.

    • @SublimeLyfeNow
      @SublimeLyfeNow 2 года назад +3

      Yeah our own and we've all got a front row seat!

    • @eyesuckle
      @eyesuckle 2 года назад

      @@barryroth7122 It's possible that there is such a story called "A Case of Conscience" (I certainly hope not, because that really is a terrible title). But there's definitely a story called "The Star" by one of the most famous science fiction writers of all time, Arthur C. Clarke, that fits your description.

    • @johncena1397
      @johncena1397 2 года назад

      @@barryroth7122 that same star reappeared in the sky in 2016 or 2017 lol look it up, and I remember seeing it in the sky myself a few years ago, it does only show up every few thousand years tho

  • @kylebroussard5952
    @kylebroussard5952 2 года назад +583

    You ever just watch these types of videos and the dude says some shit like "it's 50 light years away" and you just pause the video to think about how mind numbingly large of a distance that is, yet how miniscule it is even on a galactic scale?
    It's kinda nice man. Just makes you realize we should just enjoy the ride 🌊

    • @BirdOfHermes83
      @BirdOfHermes83 2 года назад +12

      All my friends drive a lowrider!

    • @pallabadityamohanty7917
      @pallabadityamohanty7917 2 года назад +22

      What I think of is earth is already so beautiful and given the universe's size it must hold trillions of planets. How many planets, how much beauty how much horror. There might be planets 100 times more beautiful than Disney movies. Only if we could explore them!!😃

    • @commonsense-grs
      @commonsense-grs 2 года назад +12

      Agree, these distances are just mind boggling huge, but when you think that our Milky Way galaxy is 100,000 light years across and there are trillions of galaxies out there, now that's big.

    • @dragon723.
      @dragon723. 2 года назад +15

      @Jack That is purely speculative, one interpretation. Well founded speculation, but far from proven.

    • @dragon723.
      @dragon723. 2 года назад +5

      @Jack Technically many worlds is an interpretation. I'm just being nitpicky, pay me no mind. :)

  • @1mphoen1x
    @1mphoen1x 2 года назад +10

    I always thought that immortality would be bad but now I want to see this and future discoveries.

    • @Broomer52
      @Broomer52 Год назад +2

      My compromise would be to be immortal but still killable surviving the heat death of the universe doesn’t sound fun but living long enough to see the universe would be great

    • @katsura2605
      @katsura2605 Год назад

      Bruh you guys heard of heaven? Just die bro.. Theres so much more in heaven.. All the pros minus the cons.. Be a muslim

    • @smithjarrod3935
      @smithjarrod3935 5 месяцев назад

      @@Broomer52 sharks. are immortal but can be killed

  • @magnus7763
    @magnus7763 2 года назад +478

    I just refuse to believe that we’re alone in this universe

    • @kxmode
      @kxmode 2 года назад +62

      Of course, we're not alone in this universe.
      (Psalms 83:18) "May people know that you, whose name is Jehovah, You alone are the Highest over all the earth."
      (John 8:23) "[Jesus] went on to say to them: 'You are from the realms below; I am from the realms above. You are from this world; I am not from this world.'"

    • @5972-g1v
      @5972-g1v 2 года назад +120

      @@kxmode this evidence is purely based if you believe in god though so not very relevant

    • @hannahlou3406
      @hannahlou3406 2 года назад

      We are not. The question is whether we will ever meet a living alien race. At best I think we may see evidence of it, but reaching them is a totally different matter. They are too far away to reach, ask yourself if they have more advanced technology why cant they reach us? The universe expands at a rate faster than the speed of light.

    • @code-xk4cj
      @code-xk4cj 2 года назад +17

      we're not alone. that thing's we call ''alien's'' are actually people like us

    • @kxmode
      @kxmode 2 года назад +26

      @@5972-g1v The evidence is based on two things.
      1. Order. It is found everywhere in the universe and on the earth. For example, our universe is "a fabric" of quilted superclusters. One such is called Laniakea.
      (Isaiah 40:26) "Lift up your eyes to heaven and see. Who has created these things? The One brings out their army by number; He calls them all by name. Not one of them is missing because of his vast dynamic energy and awe-inspiring power."
      (Isaiah 40:22) "There is One who dwells above the circle of the earth . . . He is stretching out the heavens like a fine gauze."
      (Isaiah 42:8) "I am Jehovah. That is my name.”
      (Revelation 4:11) "You are worthy, Jehovah, our God, to receive the glory, honor, and power because you created all things, and because of your will, they came into existence and were created."
      2. Even the shape of these superclusters looks like feathers, which is a fractal pattern. We see the same fractal patterns in snowflakes, ferns and amazingly even mountains if you were view them from above, to name a few examples. That's math. Math is a language. Math is order. It provides evidence of a thoughtful, intelligent creator. 🙂

  • @IIIAnchani
    @IIIAnchani 2 года назад +153

    I think the reason is that this planet tried to be a star, but didn't get to the necessary size. It probably would have been a binary star system, but there just wasn't enough mass, so that's how the insane rings happened. it's a mini star system in itself that didn't have enough mass to fully become a star with tiny planets

    • @whyyoumadbro2370
      @whyyoumadbro2370 2 года назад +11

      Would be interesting to know that in the future it could have large rocky moons orbiting it that formed from the rings.

    • @IIIAnchani
      @IIIAnchani 2 года назад +9

      @@whyyoumadbro2370 I'd even go as far to say that it will have moons, and they most likely are going to be rocky!

    • @elcareemojifome5562
      @elcareemojifome5562 2 года назад +6

      Yup, a failed wannabe star.

    • @mymusicplaylist2609
      @mymusicplaylist2609 2 года назад

      Dude applied to be a star but was rejected. In the end, smoked the hell out until it produced insane amount of rings

    • @themoon00
      @themoon00 2 года назад

      really special

  • @Raspse7en
    @Raspse7en 2 года назад +427

    The more you look at this kind of stuff, the more you realize how freaky and terrifying the universe is. There's so much about our universe that we don't understand and defy what we already know about it so far. Very fascinating and scary stuff, tbh.

    • @lechonmanok9164
      @lechonmanok9164 2 года назад +14

      Yeah I really can't agree more...
      It's really amazing and I feel very happy seeing people that has the same interest as me, I don't feel alone 😌

    • @husker23
      @husker23 2 года назад

      @@lechonmanok9164 your name made me hungry

    • @klever2183
      @klever2183 2 года назад +20

      It's sad that we most probably will not reach any of those fascinating worlds

    • @MrDari78
      @MrDari78 2 года назад +1

      No, the more you look at this stuff the more you realize their just making shit up at this point. Always "discovering" things they can never show us, only to show us more digital composites manipulating the blank canvas of your imagination & perception.

    • @StarSannu
      @StarSannu 2 года назад +1

      The more you look at this kind of stuff, the more you realize that a large majority of people are already doomed. Like... Really? The comment sections are horrendous. Walt Disney and NASA collaborations to make this CGI video by a channel that already has barely any/zero relation to NASA? Brainwashing?
      The documents and research papers are literally all available for the average person to read and yet brickheads don't take advantage of it, thinking they have the best Dunning-Kruger effect in the world.

  • @justinboylan8995
    @justinboylan8995 Год назад +1

    Thanks for teaching me something new 😊🎉😊

  • @Kambyday
    @Kambyday 2 года назад +101

    The thing with a lot of these planets is that they are so many light years away that what we see could be happening centuries ago so it's hard to find a habitable planet

    • @DAMfoxygrampa
      @DAMfoxygrampa 2 года назад +15

      Ehh things don't change that fast generally. Earth's been habitable for millions of years

    • @SK-dw3ed
      @SK-dw3ed 2 года назад

      @@DAMfoxygrampa eh, well, yes but technically if you were to say 65M years, that is very wrong, because a deadly event happened, and millions of years ago there were deadly beasts, so aliens have no chance to live in our planet, the gravity might be too heavy for them, or their weapons and shelter may not be enough protection, since maybe they had a blue star that gave them a lot of energy, that energy gave them a huge help in making their technology more efficient, but they will not be used to the sun, because it doesn't have enough energy for advanced machines, so aliens will have a hard time fighting gigantic reptiles while getting to know how to make a weapon that doesn't use too much energy.

    • @dexmeetsdexter
      @dexmeetsdexter 2 года назад

      @@DAMfoxygrampa no he means that we don’t have the technology to see the planets clearly. If it’s a million lights away there is no telescope on planet earth that would be able to see the planets neither through its atmosphere to seee if there are structural buildings or bases built on the planets. It would just look like a smudge on the lens and the scientists think the surface level is made of gas and what not

    • @_aWiseMan
      @_aWiseMan 2 года назад

      @@DAMfoxygrampa their is multiple times qhere earth has changed rapidly or something nearly or has happened in those millions of years tho.....a single solar flare would send us back to the dark ages and in
      The last 20 years we have been only days away from events like it......every light from citys seen from space would die instantly and it would take millions of not billions of years for some alien planet to see it and we would likely be dead by then
      Even if life is still habitable everything can change like the ice age or global warming

    • @godschosen164
      @godschosen164 2 года назад

      🤔💯👌

  • @CrazyTruckinS10
    @CrazyTruckinS10 2 года назад +16

    The cosmos is so insane! Absolutely mind-blowing

  • @commonsense-grs
    @commonsense-grs 2 года назад +539

    When I talk to my family and friends about what's out there. They all just say it sounds very boring, a few planets and some stars, it's amazing how little people know about what's out there.
    Also what's out there is truly amazing, mind boggling in fact.
    It's very hard to actually get your head around how many stars and galaxies are out there and the distances involved, so that's why we will never ever visit another planet.
    We only maybe able to see what they were like in the past, even that will be fantastic. Can't wait for what JWST can find.

    • @lesliesimon7491
      @lesliesimon7491 2 года назад +4

      we will not able to see we can only imagine, as soon as the scientist develop new software you will see more.

    • @Fizz-Pop
      @Fizz-Pop 2 года назад +45

      Mind boggling indeed. Wrap your noodle around this. There are more galaxies in the universe than there are grains of sand on Earth.

    • @commonsense-grs
      @commonsense-grs 2 года назад +14

      @@Fizz-Pop yeah I read that one as well, and I'm telling we have some very big beaches everywhere. By the way, it's the amount of stars in the universe.

    • @commonsense-grs
      @commonsense-grs 2 года назад +9

      @Nick J hahaha, I might come with you, but have you mastered light speed travel yet, but when you think of it, that's far to slow, now that's a big problem.

    • @commonsense-grs
      @commonsense-grs 2 года назад +5

      @@lesliesimon7491 also with all the new larger space telescopes in the pipeline, going to be awesome what they will find.

  • @mariogonzales1333
    @mariogonzales1333 2 года назад +3

    💯 percent entertaining and very helpful & well explained 👍⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐:

  • @whiteypants7074
    @whiteypants7074 2 года назад +79

    5:08 so basically, the planet can move super slowly, excluding normal stuff like orbit. It's just destroying, and rebuilding itself at the same time. What would happen if it reaches the core?

    • @Amine-om7yj
      @Amine-om7yj 2 года назад +6

      Omni man vs homelander remake

  • @Alloongast
    @Alloongast 2 года назад +564

    It's really amazing how scientists can study and detemine how planets light years away operates yet we haven't even explored our oceans. A lot on our planet are still undiscovered and even with the ones we've discovered, we can't explain some of them. Might be nice to just pool all our resources to learn about earth first before we even look at others.

    • @DudeInOhio85
      @DudeInOhio85 2 года назад +38

      These are all just theories my guy.

    • @Alloongast
      @Alloongast 2 года назад +36

      @@DudeInOhio85 I forgot the part when I said why waste time on theories.

    • @godschosen164
      @godschosen164 2 года назад +4

      😉👌

    • @mikegarcia4808
      @mikegarcia4808 2 года назад +19

      Your Absolutely Right. If a planet supports sentient life. It has to contain the resources needed to become interplanetary. Possibly even created but we should get to know our own planet before we learn another. May be a way we could keep this one forever.

    • @pjjacunski7979
      @pjjacunski7979 2 года назад +42

      no reason we can't explore everything at once. you want the oceans fully explored? go buy a submarine

  • @lildevilself-
    @lildevilself- 2 года назад +27

    Space is literally one of the most fascinating things

    • @dusandragovic09srb
      @dusandragovic09srb 2 года назад

      It doesn't exist.

    • @_aWiseMan
      @_aWiseMan 2 года назад +5

      @@dusandragovic09srb space does exist.........you can literally buy a telescope and see it

    • @dusandragovic09srb
      @dusandragovic09srb 2 года назад

      @@_aWiseMan Wow, a wise comment from a wise man floating on a mud ball, rotating 1600 km / h.
      All you see is LIGHTS and you call them STARS (which means nothing). Also, DARKNESS.

    • @Mannwhich
      @Mannwhich 2 года назад

      @@dusandragovic09srb Your opinion but ok.

    • @ionna_blayil
      @ionna_blayil 2 года назад +1

      @@dusandragovic09srb so if space doesn't exist to you then what are you living on

  • @ravindrasp
    @ravindrasp 2 года назад +1

    Superb content...truly breathtaking..thank you! 🤩

  • @atilllathehun1212
    @atilllathehun1212 2 года назад +13

    It's so exciting to think of what is still left to discover.

  • @jansenart0
    @jansenart0 2 года назад +167

    It would've been useful to show and explain a phase diagram for water when discussing the Waterworld GJ1214B. Just a vertical bar highlighting the X value of standard pressure at sea level would be able to show any lay person how temperature corresponds to a region of phase. Showing the region containing the pressure and temperature ranges of the Waterworld would've been able to illustrate how water wouldn't be able to exist as we know it.

    • @lesliesimon7491
      @lesliesimon7491 2 года назад +4

      Scientist are developing a new software soon you will see that too

    • @dhimankalita1690
      @dhimankalita1690 2 года назад

      Stfu... NASA is a satanic organisation trying to corrupt our understanding of the universe
      The Bible already provides us the explanation of this beautiful creation
      So believe in Jesus Christ or else u will burn in hell

    • @gwho
      @gwho 2 года назад +1

      Not enough people show whole-picture charts and paradigms

    • @jansenart0
      @jansenart0 2 года назад +1

      @@gwho Data is beautiful and CJ Minard knew this.

    • @992ras
      @992ras 2 года назад

      To call it a water world is wrong they don’t know if water exist on the world. That easy go to our solo system and look at Jupiter which doesn’t have solid water but it’s moon do have water on on them. Jupiter water would just be vapors not solid. You have to look at it like there is 50/50 that there is maybe some form of solid water or there is no solid water but gasses and vapors because it’s so many light yrs away it will be hard to tell if it is even planet it’s could be Brown Dwarf as well which some scientists believe.

  • @Shnu2
    @Shnu2 2 года назад +170

    As amazing as the planets are we have so far discovered, how fortunate are we to exist on one of the most beautiful in the universe if not the most beautiful planet that exists.

    • @dhimankalita1690
      @dhimankalita1690 2 года назад

      Stfu... NASA is a satanic organisation trying to corrupt our understanding of the universe
      The Bible already provides us the explanation of this beautiful creation
      So believe in Jesus Christ or else u will burn in hell

    • @StainderFin
      @StainderFin 2 года назад +6

      why we all ended same planet? i dont call that as luck

    • @georgemason4921
      @georgemason4921 2 года назад +18

      Ssshhh. Don't let the flat earthers hear you.

    • @sosmooth13
      @sosmooth13 2 года назад +14

      It’s pretty cool to think that others like ours are out there. With our planet being as rare as it is due to it’s sun and our position, I’m sure there are still plenty others like ours out there. That reality alone has actually taken me a bit more away from religion recently and it’s conflicting but cool to think about at the same time.

    • @lothburke2243
      @lothburke2243 2 года назад +18

      i believe there are other earth like planets out there far more beautiful unspoiled by mankind.

  • @The_Very_Official_ZillaCentral
    @The_Very_Official_ZillaCentral 2 года назад +2

    Thus was so fun to learn! Thank you. I appreciated hearing about this.

  • @thmzshfq
    @thmzshfq 2 года назад +17

    0:10 "this is Saturn on steroids" 💀

    • @abc123abc12-f
      @abc123abc12-f 2 года назад +1

      I put this on full blast while I was taking a shite and I was confused

  • @Wisznuification
    @Wisznuification 2 года назад +16

    Nasa: "We discovered a marshmallow planet"
    Me: "Is it edible?"

  • @taylenday
    @taylenday 2 года назад +68

    Imagine a day far in the future when we can surf the galaxies as easily as we surf the internet now. What mind blowing and unimaginable and beautiful and horrific things we would get to see and experience that are far beyond our life's experiences of the present.

    • @YannickTG
      @YannickTG 2 года назад +7

      we also get to see mind blowing, unimaginable, beautiful and horrific things on the internet. It prob will just be something of that generation, in the way we have smartphones these days

    • @kippertrace5808
      @kippertrace5808 2 года назад +9

      Imagine, ''UNIVERSAL PRIDE MONTH''🤢

    • @onionknight5553
      @onionknight5553 2 года назад +6

      Wouldn't that make us Demi-Gods or Gods? Highly doubt if that's possible. We'll all die before we could leave the solar system.

    • @onionknight5553
      @onionknight5553 2 года назад +4

      @@kippertrace5808 bruh 🤮

    • @googleanti-speech7618
      @googleanti-speech7618 2 года назад

      the only way that would be truly possible is absolute teleportation and or the control of time.

  • @simonreeves957
    @simonreeves957 Год назад +43

    This video just made me realize how small and insignificant we are in the grand scheme of things. But at the same time, it's a humbling thought that we could be a blip on someone else's radar.

    • @randomuser942464
      @randomuser942464 Год назад +3

      Really... this is the video?

    • @1001011011010
      @1001011011010 Год назад +2

      We have a small part to play in a great tapestry which has stars for threads! It's amazing to think about 😊

    • @katsura2605
      @katsura2605 Год назад +1

      What are the sun purpose? Why it was created? To serve who? To accomodated who?

    • @vineousvondrake2456
      @vineousvondrake2456 3 месяца назад

      if we're even a blip that has been noticed

  • @AlexOctav
    @AlexOctav 2 года назад +27

    Super cool video. I can understand how we can guesstimate the size of the planets having a point of reference as a magnification we are looking with an estimated scale. How are we able to do the same for mass? Is it based off what we suspect the planets are made out of and then estimate its density or is there an actual device that measures it light years away 🥹🥹🥹

    • @danielcamacho1913
      @danielcamacho1913 2 года назад +7

      Astronomers estimate mass by gravity: If there's a planet orbiting a star, it makes the star wobble a bit. Astronomers measure and time the movement of the star, and it tells them something about the intensity of the planet's gravity. They use that to estimate the mass and density of the planet. A more complex wobble pattern can indicate multiple planets.
      In fact, I think they've found a lot more exoplanets this way than by the transit method.

    • @AlexOctav
      @AlexOctav 2 года назад +2

      @@danielcamacho1913 wow thank you for the explanation! That’s pretty cool. Always wondered what they used to measure since it’s not exactly tangible. I know they use colors to detect movement and stuff that’s about it 😜

    • @danielcamacho1913
      @danielcamacho1913 2 года назад +1

      They have also detected some planets with direct imaging, but it's just infrared, and they planets are tiny dots in those images. It seems like what they accomplished was to confirm the planets were there and the gravity calculations were correct.

  • @christmassnow3465
    @christmassnow3465 2 года назад +69

    Love the detailed descriptions. Hope one day to see a rendering of the planet and its sky as seen from its surface.

    • @jennyanydots2389
      @jennyanydots2389 2 года назад +5

      If you love detailed descriptions you should watch his video on forced abortions.

    • @daoistsaintmasterofthenasc6220
      @daoistsaintmasterofthenasc6220 2 года назад +7

      @@jennyanydots2389 wtf ???

    • @jennyanydots2389
      @jennyanydots2389 2 года назад

      @@daoistsaintmasterofthenasc6220 I know what you're trying to do bro. Don't abortion shame me man.

    • @BirdOfHermes83
      @BirdOfHermes83 2 года назад

      @@daoistsaintmasterofthenasc6220 it's a troll!

    • @lesliesimon7491
      @lesliesimon7491 2 года назад +1

      Scientist are developing a new software soon you will see that too

  • @jeremyjames7009
    @jeremyjames7009 2 года назад +52

    Can you imagine some other civilization out there are saying the same things about us?

    • @commonsense-grs
      @commonsense-grs 2 года назад +7

      Yeah, I can image that, and I sure there could be another Earth out there somewhere with people just like us.

    • @lord1995be
      @lord1995be 2 года назад +5

      @@commonsense-grs maybe even dinosaurs :D

    • @jhoxihum3230
      @jhoxihum3230 2 года назад

      Yeah, they be saying "why these dumbass mofos let dudes identifying as chicks compete against woman in sports?...It defies all logic".

    • @commonsense-grs
      @commonsense-grs 2 года назад +2

      @@lord1995be without a doubt there would be, but we will never see them unfortunately

    • @goodman4093
      @goodman4093 2 года назад +1

      Don't fool yourself. No life out there

  • @lengo-x5d
    @lengo-x5d 5 месяцев назад

    Your content is always top-notch. Thanks a lot!

  • @heathens516
    @heathens516 2 года назад +78

    We would not be able to colonize a planet with 6 times the mass of Earth, like Gliese 581d. A greater gravitational pull on our body would cause us to weigh more, wearing out various organs significantly faster, like our heart for example.

    • @Azrael79a
      @Azrael79a 2 года назад +8

      We would likely have much more advanced biology before we got the chance to colonize a planet like that lol.

    • @heathens516
      @heathens516 2 года назад +4

      @@Azrael79a That's a fair point but all I have to go on is what our biology is like now.

    • @eazypeazy33
      @eazypeazy33 2 года назад +6

      Seems like the gravity here weighs us down still. 🤦‍♂️😂

    • @heathens516
      @heathens516 2 года назад +3

      @@eazypeazy33 Mars has less mass than Earth and so does the Moon, therefore gravity is weaker on Mars and the Moon. If a planet has 6 times the mass of Earth, then gravity would be stronger there compared to Earth. How do you not understand this?

    • @eazypeazy33
      @eazypeazy33 2 года назад +5

      @@heathens516 the joke went over your head. 👌🏽 Sorry for seeming dumb I’m is a simpleton ..

  • @potatoman1768
    @potatoman1768 2 года назад +38

    I wonder if that teaspoon of that star could survive failing through Earths Atmosphere to crash into the surface. I’d imagine it could with how dense it is.

    • @alixay100
      @alixay100 2 года назад +9

      I don't think Earth would survive the gravitational pull from that teaspoon.

    • @Yora21
      @Yora21 2 года назад +7

      The material of neutron stars is under incredible pressure from the neutron star's gravity.
      If you could somehow remove a cubic centimeter and get it out of the neutron star, it only has it's own gravity to compress it, which is nowhere near enough to keep it that greatly compressed.
      It would probably be kinda like a grain of maize turning into popcorn, except on a much larger scale. It certainly would completely rip itself apart, probably just turning into fine dust or gas.
      Or as another example, imagine filling a rubber balloon with air at the bottom of the ocean. As you let it rise towards the surface, the water pressure decreases, the air inside expands, and eventually the balloon will pop.

    • @turbo8628
      @turbo8628 2 года назад

      @@Yora21 i think that is boyle's law. Deep sea divers have to exhale as they approach the surface or they will damage their lungs.

    • @1959Berre
      @1959Berre 2 года назад +2

      @@Yora21 This is what happens to the lungs of a scuba diver who rises to fast to the surface without properly exhaling. The lungs expand and tear. Very painful and deadly.

    • @brucetucker4847
      @brucetucker4847 2 года назад +1

      ​@@Yora21 I imagine that would be extremely bad news for anyone nearby.

  • @40PMLucian
    @40PMLucian 2 года назад +23

    How can you prove a planet has a solid surface or not? I don't know how it works

    • @Guitarman7133
      @Guitarman7133 2 года назад

      ITS ALL A FKN LIE. JUST WATCH ALL THE HUNDREDS OF NASA ROCKET LAUNCHES AND SEE HOW SLOWWWW THEY GO UP. A ROCKET MUST TAKE OFF AS FAST AS A BULLET, NOT CREEP UP SLOWLY. NASA IS THE BIGGEST BUYER OF HELIUM. HMMMM. ALL SPACE ROCKETS GO UP, SIDEWAYS, THEN DOWN INTO THE SEA. THERE IS NO SPACE, YOU CANNOT GET PAST THE BLUE SKY DOME. WHY IS THE SKY BLUE? BECAUSE YOU ARE LOOKING AT THE WATERS BEHIND IT.

    • @alcubz2622
      @alcubz2622 2 года назад +10

      Light passes through molecules differently. So basically they can know the main composition of a planet by studying how light passes through it

    • @40PMLucian
      @40PMLucian 2 года назад +1

      @@alcubz2622 Oh wow alright. Thank you!

    • @eVill420
      @eVill420 2 года назад

      @@alcubz2622 however that can only work for planets discovered using the transit method and only on the largest planets close to us. much of this is guesswork and could easily turn out to be wrong in some fashion. James Webb telescope will probably answer some of our questions though

  • @smithplayzreviews6205
    @smithplayzreviews6205 2 года назад +4

    Props to the man that travelled around the universe for this vid

  • @davidarbuckle7236
    @davidarbuckle7236 2 года назад +23

    Not an expert, but I have a feeling that most of the habitable planets in the Universe are water planets. that are either completely covered with water or like the earth with a few continents. It makes logical sense as everywhere there is water on Earth there is life.

    • @compositioncompilation
      @compositioncompilation 2 года назад +3

      Your statement agrees with Genesis 1:2

    • @davidarbuckle7236
      @davidarbuckle7236 2 года назад +1

      @@compositioncompilation Which means almost nothing in this discussion, but okay, nice to know the author of Genesis had that insight.

    • @compositioncompilation
      @compositioncompilation 2 года назад +2

      @@davidarbuckle7236
      We ll never stop learning.
      It requires Our humility to realise that there is a more powerful being who set things in motion after designing this all..
      Ps 100:3
      The more we come to see..the more we can see evidence of awesomeness

  • @rora9553
    @rora9553 2 года назад +14

    Consider how dense neutron stars are, and the still produce light! I cannot fathom how dense a black hole must be in comparison.

    • @TactileTherapy
      @TactileTherapy 2 года назад +3

      A teaspoon of neutron star weighs as much as Mt.Everest. A teaspoon of black hole weighs as much as reality.

    • @ぼじん-o5r
      @ぼじん-o5r 2 года назад +1

      But how can a hole be dense?

    • @rora9553
      @rora9553 2 года назад +3

      @@ぼじん-o5r Basically, science is not yet sure if black holes are really tears in reality, or just super dense objects. Imagine a reverse star. It’s still a spherical object, but it sucks in light instead of giving it off.

    • @TactileTherapy
      @TactileTherapy 2 года назад +3

      @@ぼじん-o5r because “black hole” doesn’t rly tell the whole story. It’s the singularity of the black hole that’s the most misunderstood. It could be a physical object or a tear in space. The density calculation derives from the properties of whatever it is. It’s like solving for X - Light can’t escape. It has volume. It has mass. What does X equal?

    • @turbo8628
      @turbo8628 2 года назад +1

      @@ぼじん-o5r try not to think of it as a hole.
      Gravity attracts objects, with the bigger objects usually having a greater attraction.
      If a planet got too close to a star then it will be pulled in and ripped to pieces. We would see this because the star has enough enough attraction for the planet, but not enough to attract light particles.
      Now, imagine something that has such a massive gravitational pull that even light particles cannot escape. What you would see would be complete darkness, which in the empty dark backdrop of space means you would be looking at a black dot on a black background!
      The only way you could see a black hole is if something such as a star was attracted to it - and all you would see is the star being ripped apart as it enters the black hole...
      ... and then nothing! The star has been swallowed by the black hole, becoming a part of the black hole.
      Obviously, I don't know if this is exactly what a black hole is, but it makes more sense that at some point light particles are affected by extremely large gravitational forces than to suggest that there is some sort of tear in space.

  • @SK-dw3ed
    @SK-dw3ed 2 года назад +21

    some aliens from very distant planets, have very different conditions than us, which means if they visit our planet, they will become very shocked because how earth works, for example, they get their reactor radiation focused energy from a liquid, but we get it from uranium which is solid, so everything that is weird for us, is normal to them.

    • @rogerredford4010
      @rogerredford4010 2 года назад +1

      Yes, it is indeed very strange here..You people have a delightful sense of the absurd, you may take some comfort in that..

    • @SK-dw3ed
      @SK-dw3ed 2 года назад

      @@rogerredford4010 Normally, you would think I would shout "ALIEN!", I know this is a joke, but let's think it's maybe a real alien speaking our language, to be honest, thinking how cruel humanity is, how it isn't one bit grateful to its ancestors who guided it to the top of the food chain, yes you know what I'm talking about here, unfortunately, the primates we used to be are no longer us, we are very different from what we were, as primates, we used to make clans no matter how terrible an ape looks like, we helped each other like brothers and sister even though we didn't even know each other, but now we evolved into traitors, where is altruism now? It is very few in humans now. If there are people in need of money, people who are starving, how does the country have enough money to buy millions of weapons and bombs, but not a single penny to fix what I just said? We never even held a spear at each other's throats long ago, now? School shootings? Murders? Governments hiding very vital information? Welp, let's just say that being pressurized to do something you hate to do, would make you want to abandon this pathetic life, but why take other people with you? It doesn't benefit anyone or anything, it just slows down the human species from realizing the truth, this is why humans die a lot, we kill each other, like predator and prey in a cage, so this whole thing I wrote, is to mention a kid with the age of 13-14s, an innocent kid, got sentenced to death for being near two brutally murdered women, after realizing he was innocent, and the fact that he was black, they panicked and hid the information from the public, after 70 years, the information was debunked, but I don't know the rest, I don't know why but my human body tells me that they should receive the punishment they did to him, am I one among the few humans who have remorse? Well, I would hate to say that, because I view myself as an object with the ability to think, I don't like being a creature, creatures don't realize the fact that they always follow their instinct, the instinct to reproduce, the instinct to fight for dominance, what's the point? At the end you just realize that your mind is controlling you, unfortunately, I only address these stuff when I am in an intelligent mood, and I feel like this mood is fading away, I might not even remember that I wrote this, so, I just wanna say one last thing, think outside of the creature box. And if you are an alien, you have every right to go on a genocide. Blow it up with lasers, rockets, whatever weapon you have, just destroy humanity, and leave apes and orangutans alive, they might evolve into the right species.

    • @rogerredford4010
      @rogerredford4010 2 года назад +2

      @@SK-dw3ed Humans are still evolving. Evolution is cruel and painful, especially if you present it as a small snapshot in time. Human cruelty and wars are undeniable but not unique in the animal kingdom. Apes tear each other apart out of fear, to access a mate or out of anger as well.. humans are not unique in that sense. Some animals kill for sport or practice, like cats with a mouse they torment, kill and leave aside. Humans just have more reasons to go to war, such as greed and belief. There is the good and noble as well of course but humans have not reached their potential. Perhaps they will but they may not, at least in the current form. Ultimately, millions of years from now, a new species may evolve, perhaps a better one. As much as humans may damage the planet in whatever apocalypse, it will recover, perhaps be very different, but continue on for many more millions of years. No need to blow anything up, nature takes it's own course and the current situation would be little more than a curiosity to an outside observer.

    • @SK-dw3ed
      @SK-dw3ed 2 года назад

      @@rogerredford4010 Welp, I believe if we keep hurting earth this way, some day it might evolve a plague that modifies the human capabilities, and with a new state of mind, to kill anything it sees except the infected, these are capable of even taking down special forces. Once everything is infected, the plague will kill everyone instantly, like a switch, everyone will fall down, but this is just a theory, we might be too poisonous for earth that it will counterattack someday, and I am not saying that earth is sentient, the things that are IN IT, are sentient.

    • @mohammedjafer9265
      @mohammedjafer9265 2 года назад

      @@rogerredford4010 we are not animal's our intellect is far more superior we have will they follow their instincts...

  • @charlesirwingarado3114
    @charlesirwingarado3114 2 года назад

    TY for the awesome list

  • @RenormalizedAdvait
    @RenormalizedAdvait 2 года назад +25

    Kepler 70b and Kepler 70c were previously postulated to be exoplanets of star Kepler 70 to explain the changes in magnitude in the star light due to transitions of the exoplanets around the star. These were found to be non-existent in 2015 study as those variations are considered as pulsation of the star.

  • @ishaanvatsa2378
    @ishaanvatsa2378 2 года назад +7

    Exactly what I need at 3 am

  • @Abrax3s
    @Abrax3s 2 года назад +90

    Look,I just wanna say... how does anything from outside of earth that we have just recently discovered defy logic ? The logic that applies on earth might not apply on a different planet because it is simply not in the same realm of what we know because we humans are not advanced enough to understand it. That doesn't mean it defies logic, it just means we aren't that advanced to make logic out of it

    • @Abrax3s
      @Abrax3s 2 года назад +1

      @@stephenowen8815 ... what ?

    • @makandalp
      @makandalp 2 года назад +15

      Finally someone who understood it.
      Thank you.
      The majority of people think everything has to make sense

    • @samueltrankvill735
      @samueltrankvill735 2 года назад

      @@Abrax3s His comment is spot on.

    • @ankitamishra3230
      @ankitamishra3230 2 года назад +6

      Defy logic in sense our realms logic. True your point is perfect but I think it defies our logic

    • @RastjackA
      @RastjackA 2 года назад +3

      "Look, I just wanna say"... Our logic is our understanding. That's the whole point of the word and meaning. Wtf are you waffling on about..

  • @Onceuponatime-video
    @Onceuponatime-video Год назад

    Excellent job on this video, I learned so much!

  • @Spencer-wc6ew
    @Spencer-wc6ew 2 года назад +4

    I just find it amazing the details we can infer about these planets from so far away!

  • @Martin-117
    @Martin-117 2 года назад +7

    Just because it defies what we understand about our current knowledge of the universe, does not mean it's not possible. We've only explored 20% of our ocean and not even 1% of the observable universe

  • @davidanderson_surrey_bc
    @davidanderson_surrey_bc 2 года назад +7

    Narrator: Just one teaspoon of this planet would weigh billions of tons.
    Me: Oh? And what, exactly, is this teaspoon made of?

    • @WAMTAT
      @WAMTAT 2 года назад +1

      Dark matter (probably)

    • @Yora21
      @Yora21 2 года назад

      Once that teaspoon touches the neutron star, it just becomes more neutron star.
      Like anything else that touches a neutron star.
      Everything that lands on the surface is instantly compressed into more neutron mass.

    • @banana9056
      @banana9056 2 года назад

      neutron stars are dense because there is too much matter compressed in a very small area

  • @ZeketheZealot
    @ZeketheZealot 2 года назад +2

    Wait, Kepler 70b was *inside* its sun during the Red Giant phase? And it *maintained its orbit* around the sun’s core whilst inside it, and as the star shrank down it *REEMERGED* as an iron core?!
    That’s fucking incredible

  • @mickeyray3793
    @mickeyray3793 2 года назад +93

    Some commenters say,"how fortunate we are to live on such a lovely perfect planet, instead of those hellish planets!"
    Well, actually, this is the only kind of planet we COULD have evolved on! You evolve to fit the characteristics of your planet. Good fortune has nothing to do with it. But tragically, even on a planet which is capable of having perfect conditions and environments, most people wind up living miserable lives, in far from perfect conditions.

    • @Lazy-Lizard
      @Lazy-Lizard 2 года назад +5

      Mainly due to other people! :)
      Also, capitalism.

    • @stevenscott2136
      @stevenscott2136 2 года назад +16

      @@Lazy-Lizard Greed, not capitalism. People were miserable LONG before capitalism was invented, and they're miserable in non-capitalist nations right now. Basically, everything between "hunter-gatherer tribe" and "post-scarcity nanotech utopia" is going to have loads of misery.

    • @Lazy-Lizard
      @Lazy-Lizard 2 года назад +1

      @@stevenscott2136 true

    • @Guitarman7133
      @Guitarman7133 2 года назад

      WE DONT LIVE ON A FKN PLANET. WE LIVE ON A FLAT PLANE WITH A DOME COVERING US, AND WATER IS ABOVE THE DOME. READ YOUR BIBLE.

    • @harrywalker5836
      @harrywalker5836 2 года назад

      yes,, tru,, but, we were created here on earth, by an alien race. so, there has to be at least 1, planet out there, like ours. viper tv.. they come around every 3.600 yrs. they stayed here while there planet was reachable. mining minerals for there planet. gold mainly,. rediation protection from there sun..

  • @laporziuncula
    @laporziuncula 2 года назад +4

    I can’t wrap my mind around how we can know so much about the compositions and characteristics of planets so far away.

    • @hagen_5159
      @hagen_5159 2 года назад

      We can't. This is completely made up.

    • @stephenmorris976
      @stephenmorris976 2 года назад +3

      Calculations, colours, variations in expected movement patterns. Astronomers have a lot of time to look at stuff and guess.

    • @xavierlopes9204
      @xavierlopes9204 2 года назад +1

      @@stephenmorris976 and even then, their guesses are way off or totally ridiculous.

  • @dramaticvirghoe
    @dramaticvirghoe 2 года назад +39

    it's kinda sad how we'll never see these planets in our lifetime unless we die but even then we're not sure if we can see these in the afterlife

    • @robertcarr2462
      @robertcarr2462 2 года назад +6

      1 corinthians2:9 the Bible says, Eye Hath not seen, nor ear heard, nor entered into the heart of man, the things which God hath prepared for them that love him. As a believer in Jesus maybe we’ll get to see some of the glorious things he made in space from heaven. It’s my hope we will, I’ll have all of eternity🌕🌍⭐️💫🪐🙏🏻

    • @heywaitMarlee
      @heywaitMarlee 2 года назад +6

      I think we will. I believe that after death but before going to our afterlife (if that's what you believe) we get to do a kind of tour of the universe if we want to. That would just be amazing, to be able to see beyond our own limited understanding and view other worlds and galaxies

    • @dramaticvirghoe
      @dramaticvirghoe 2 года назад +1

      @@heywaitMarlee i don't believe in religion, but that's what i've thought of too. seeing the universe and exploring all of its entirety makes me excited to leave this earth ngl

    • @kokoeteantigha389
      @kokoeteantigha389 2 года назад +5

      @@dramaticvirghoe God's existence isn't a religion but an inescapable reality. Men make religion in order to prey on other men, but God just happens to be the only sensible explanation for this cosmos and everything around us.
      And yes I truly believe we will get to see all these things that God created when we enter into eternity to be with Him. What else would eternity be if it didn't involve our beholding in its every detail the magnificent works of God's hands and to traverse backwards and forwards through time unravelling every mystery that ever was whether in this or any other existence. I truly cannot wait!

    • @barryroth7122
      @barryroth7122 2 года назад +1

      What's really sad is how people like you can witness the discoveries of the true facts of our existence and the structure of the universe and still cling to the fantasy of a magic daddy in the sky that created all that is.

  • @13thpersona
    @13thpersona Год назад

    Thank you for this!

  • @cinemartin3530
    @cinemartin3530 2 года назад +14

    Boundless space is fraught with a mind-boggling number of amazing things,, and I am sure that there is still a lot of interesting things ahead ! I really like your videos, space is very exciting, even though I will never go there. On the other hand, since our planet is in space, technically I'm in it too, so it's not that bad )

  • @stavik96
    @stavik96 2 года назад +30

    5:11 So would that mean the cold side is just covered in an ever-growing layer of iron? You'd think the hot side would run out of iron at some point.

    • @socalmsofly
      @socalmsofly 2 года назад

      Stop asking real questions
      😂

    • @sc2alover860
      @sc2alover860 2 года назад +7

      Lol it just keeps melting down so eventually the cold side just keeps becoming the hot

    • @MistahJigglah
      @MistahJigglah 2 года назад +2

      As long as the iron is always deposited on the dark side, it would never run out.
      The planet would just have an iron cycle.

    • @powerinknowledge2392
      @powerinknowledge2392 2 года назад +1

      Bro. It’s like the water cycle just at a much hotter temperature. We don’t run out of water as it collects on the cool side of earth lol.

  • @Wuttahfak
    @Wuttahfak 2 года назад +18

    Ive always been that type of kid that loves planets. And i still do! All these new planets that we discover are satisfying!

  • @tanglmangl
    @tanglmangl 2 года назад +2

    “This is Saturn on steroids.”
    That got me laughing.

  • @dumitrulangham1721
    @dumitrulangham1721 2 года назад +6

    I love 💗 planets 🪐 and space exploration

  • @louies5988
    @louies5988 2 года назад +18

    It’s amazing how we allegedly know so much about things that are so far away from us but yet we don’t know all the secrets that our oceans and Antarctica hold

    • @franklaskus2395
      @franklaskus2395 2 года назад +3

      Oh they don’t want us looking into that.

    • @MrBottlecapBill
      @MrBottlecapBill 2 года назад +3

      Technically we don't know any of this for sure. It's all conjecture based on what we think we know. The accuracy will depend on our ability to actually verify anything which may be impossible.

    • @louies5988
      @louies5988 2 года назад +1

      @@MrBottlecapBill hence why I said allegedly

    • @jakegapasin3727
      @jakegapasin3727 2 года назад +1

      This is called lies! Nobody can fathom the creation of the most High

    • @louies5988
      @louies5988 2 года назад +1

      @@jakegapasin3727 exactly

  • @crimsonfenrir2334
    @crimsonfenrir2334 2 года назад +7

    There's actually a fantasy book with similar concept, made by my friend and shared in our group. The place called Primus and it defy science in so many ways, as the planet is so big that stars actually orbit the planet. Way crazier than Tolkien stuff because it's inspired by so many myths and cultures, with so many amazingly powerful characters that continously defy expectations.

    • @shareetz3154
      @shareetz3154 2 года назад +1

      that sounds super interesting! please share the title if it ever gets published or something.

    • @crimsonfenrir2334
      @crimsonfenrir2334 2 года назад

      @@shareetz3154 unfortunately the book never was finished (yet) but everyone can read it on wattpad (idk if he upload it anywhere else) though it's hard to find

    • @blackgalaxy5278
      @blackgalaxy5278 Год назад +1

      The sun orbits its planet?
      Flat earth it is 😅

  • @lliy_andscarlet1226
    @lliy_andscarlet1226 2 года назад

    NAW THE FACT THAT YOU SAID “This is Saturn, on steroids.” SO SERIOUSLY WAS HILARIOUS

  • @BlackEpyon
    @BlackEpyon 2 года назад +36

    Explanation should also be given of the various methods by which these exoplanets are detected, and which methods offer which kinds of data. Also should be mentioned that a lot of the properties of these exoplanets are theoretical extrapolations based on the limited data we have of them, and further data collection could refine these properties, or change them completely. As is though, none of these exoplanets "defy all logic."

    • @CORZER0
      @CORZER0 2 года назад

      It's all speculation. Very little of what they claim can be proven. The ONLY tangible evidence of anything outside our planet that we have to physically investigate and study is light.

    • @BlackEpyon
      @BlackEpyon 2 года назад

      ​@@CORZER0 You can learn quite a lot from light, but the scientists who take these measurements are careful to distinguish what they know from what they imagine. The people who report on these findings often let imagination tell the story, rather than the data.
      A big clue should be the title, "NASA discovered..." That's not what NASA does. NASA may be responsible for getting the telescope up in orbit, or maybe ESA, JAXA, etc, but it's the scientists who book time on the telescope that make the discoveries. And sometimes not even them. Sometimes it's people who sift through the collected data afterwards looking for something else entirely that stumble across something interesting.

    • @langleybeliever7789
      @langleybeliever7789 2 года назад +1

      Yes all theoretical and no actual footage or facts.

    • @ZyraReflex
      @ZyraReflex 2 года назад

      this channel is sensationalist trash, don't recommend besides maybe finding names for things to research on your own

  • @painmt651
    @painmt651 2 года назад +16

    What cracks me up, is the more that we find out about our solar system, the more we find out that everything they thought about it is wrong. Like which planets would have a magnetic field, and atmospheres, and how they used to think that Venus in Mars had civilizations and all this other stuff. The more we learn the more we realize that most scientists don’t know what they’re talking about about a lot of things.

    • @jhoxihum3230
      @jhoxihum3230 2 года назад +9

      What cracks me up, you claiming EVERYTHING "they" thought about is wrong.

    • @Mercurio-Morat-Goes-Bughunting
      @Mercurio-Morat-Goes-Bughunting 2 года назад

      The thing is, it isn't everything. It's nearly all the stuff based on "logic" and "reason" that's wrong while all the finding's based directly on reproducible observations have direct practical applications because they're right. This was the finding of a study done in the 18th century by Imanuel Kant. The funny thing is, when it comes to people, nothing ever changes. Much of the "explanatory" side of science (luminiferous aether, creationism, phlogiston, caloric, eugenics, greenhouse effect, etc.), remains mired in supposition and, technically, superstition; because technological advancement doesn't change what it is to be human.
      One thing about human nature; humans are egregiously bad at logic. Only a linear processor can be trusted to execute logic with any fidelity. Neural networks, on the other hand, excel at making associations between things with no logical connection. That's what makes them so much better at heuristic processes and so it would seem that the need to learn and adapt to our environment is why we evolved a brain based on a neural network, not on a linear processor. And that makes us all inherently bad at logic; egregiously so.
      Science can and does go a long way on sufficient humility to stick to reproducible observations and their inferences. However, it is the loud minority of arrogant narcissists who always try to push science beyond what can be learned directly from reproducible observation. This is a human nature problem and, as such, it will never change so long as we are all homo sapiens.

    • @painmt651
      @painmt651 2 года назад +1

      @@jhoxihum3230 for instance: if the planets and the moon came to be as their theory suggested, you could NOT have a moon which “rings like a bell” when impacted.... they predicted/expected magnetic fields or lack thereof.... water on the moon was a surprise

    • @jhoxihum3230
      @jhoxihum3230 2 года назад +2

      @@painmt651 An "instance", nice.....that changes everything!!!

    • @ShacolateClown
      @ShacolateClown 2 года назад

      What do you expect nowadays when a "scientist" tortures dogs to "see if they feel pain" and claims "i am the soyance"

  • @MissCaramelSmoothie
    @MissCaramelSmoothie 2 года назад +15

    I'm having a hard time comprehending how nasa can see all these planets that are soo soo far away and come up with all of these details???

    • @lindaj5492
      @lindaj5492 2 года назад

      It’s science, and technology based on science.

    • @Flash4ML
      @Flash4ML 2 года назад +1

      Space telescopes

    • @stevenscott2136
      @stevenscott2136 2 года назад +5

      That's the problem with science-popularization media -- by trimming out the math and the disclaimers from a scientific paper, they make "best guess from what little data we have" sound like "we know this".

    • @MissCaramelSmoothie
      @MissCaramelSmoothie 2 года назад

      @@Flash4ML Well I know telescopes are involved, but considering that these objects in space are so far away, I just wonder how they came up with the technology to see as far as they tell us they can see. It's almost miraculous.

    • @Flash4ML
      @Flash4ML 2 года назад +2

      @@MissCaramelSmoothie It may seem miraculous, but so did a lot of technological advancements lol, it's just science. Look up the Hubble Space Telescope or the CGRO if you're confused

  • @naileshrami6395
    @naileshrami6395 2 месяца назад

    NICE INFORMATION ❤❤

  • @DavidM-tg1oy
    @DavidM-tg1oy 2 года назад +17

    "Few of the exo planets are suitable for colonization..."
    Call me crazy, but I was thinking of a summer vacation on PSR J1719-1438b.
    It might be fun to have a strobe light for a sun, and the extraordinary gravity of a pulsar would display the most remarkable tides imaginable! Surfing mile-high waves is definitely something one can't do on Earth. Certainly something to tell folks at home about upon your return!
    Just saying...

    • @麦克-n8l
      @麦克-n8l 2 года назад +7

      The travel time would only be about 8 million years with our fastest technology. Just put on a playlist and you’ll be there before you know it!

    • @alixay100
      @alixay100 2 года назад +2

      Wouldn't the radiation fry everything when the light passes through lol

    • @DavidM-tg1oy
      @DavidM-tg1oy 2 года назад +2

      @@alixay100 Always looking at the down side...you're no fun at all!

  • @massimocrimi5796
    @massimocrimi5796 Год назад +4

    I love it learning about the universe but in the same time my brain start to hurts to know how immense the universe it is !!!

  • @desmon8574
    @desmon8574 2 года назад +31

    I've always wondered how scientists can possibly know what consists of a planet so far away

    • @desmon8574
      @desmon8574 2 года назад

      @Squinchy thanks bro

    • @DunderHead.5000
      @DunderHead.5000 2 года назад +1

      We know more about Pluto than Earth.

    • @johnbgood52
      @johnbgood52 2 года назад +4

      I think the narrator is making most of it up, to be honest.

    • @mohdzainlone
      @mohdzainlone 2 года назад

      @@DunderHead.5000 we actually almost know everything about earth

    • @KletosMinistries
      @KletosMinistries 2 года назад +2

      Imagination.

  • @theconner8294
    @theconner8294 2 года назад

    Great video 💯

  • @mike63417
    @mike63417 2 года назад +13

    Big plant surrounding a dwarf star.
    But I think the logic here is that the star is much more massive and dense than the big planet.

    • @paulgibbon5991
      @paulgibbon5991 2 года назад +3

      Basically, think of a kung fu movie where the big brute challenges the harmless-looking old man, and then gets hip-tossed across the room.

    • @Yora21
      @Yora21 2 года назад

      Every planet orbiting a neutron star will be hundreds of times larger in diameter. Neutron stars are compressed down to a tiny size of 40km across.

  • @monatyagi9251
    @monatyagi9251 2 года назад +14

    BRO THE LAST ONE WAS MIND BLOWING 🤯🤯🤯

  • @OVERLORDCNOTE
    @OVERLORDCNOTE 2 года назад +48

    Imagine believing that the planet defies “logic” and not understanding how little we actually know about planets.

    • @MikeMayneOfficial
      @MikeMayneOfficial 2 года назад +19

      But that's the thing.. we know so little that a new discovery, really does defy our current logic.

    • @OVERLORDCNOTE
      @OVERLORDCNOTE 2 года назад +14

      @@MikeMayneOfficial or it could be that using logic at all to understand the universe is wrong

    • @kenyalmb
      @kenyalmb 2 года назад

      This channel is all BS, No proof at all.

    • @Arbiter710
      @Arbiter710 2 года назад +2

      @@OVERLORDCNOTE yea the universe dosent run on “logic” at all

    • @dhimankalita1690
      @dhimankalita1690 2 года назад

      Stfu... NASA is a satanic organisation trying to corrupt our understanding of the universe
      The Bible already provides us the explanation of this beautiful creation
      So believe in Jesus Christ or else u will burn in hell

  • @lylejames965
    @lylejames965 Год назад +1

    BioWare must have hired astrophysicists to do the descriptions of the planets in Mass effect coz so far,they seemed pretty accurate with what’s being described here

    • @Kumagoro42
      @Kumagoro42 Год назад

      You don't have to hire scientists, all the data are public, you just need good writers that can do some research.

  • @arohk1579
    @arohk1579 2 года назад +40

    It would be so cool to have warp drive ships. We would no longer have to speculate what these planets are like as depending on the speed of the ship it could take hours to a few years.
    I still love watching and studying this stuff as it is fascinating.

    • @Slo-ryde
      @Slo-ryde 2 года назад +7

      The amount of energy needed to warp space to shorten such distances is enormous.

    • @_JustAnotherKid__
      @_JustAnotherKid__ 2 года назад +5

      “For only 20 trillion dollars you too could have a warp panel from Point A to Point B, want to go to Antarctica? Done. How about Earth’s core? Say no more.”

    • @Guitarman7133
      @Guitarman7133 2 года назад

      ITS ALL A FKN LIE. SPACE IS NOT REAL.

    • @drunkin12Many
      @drunkin12Many 2 года назад +5

      Yeah but just imagine how crazy the changes would be at those speeds. You look at any point and it is how it was when the light left however many years ago. You can't even see where you are going until you get there.

    • @VoidSpace9
      @VoidSpace9 2 года назад +1

      You don’t need to go faster than light to get there faster. You can bend space while going slower than light speed by using natural portals or wormholes

  • @1978rharris
    @1978rharris 2 года назад +12

    We live in a fascinating time. The universe is 13.8 BILLION years old already. But it is still in its very infancy. Our time here is blessed with the light from stars abundant in our visible universe, but the universe is expanding and that expansion is speeding up. It’ll get to the point where it’ll be expanding faster than the speed of light and at THAT point all the stars within that field of expansion will fade from our view. The universe to us will go dark and we will be trapped forevermore in our local little island of light, never able to see or to visit other stars or worlds. The night sky will be black, and we will be truly alone.
    But for right now, we can see the beauty in the heavens. Never take it for granted. The universe is so vast that if you can imagine something, somewhere up there it’s probably happening.

  • @sygmarvexarion7891
    @sygmarvexarion7891 2 года назад +6

    - "We have discovered a new planet!"
    - "Yay!"
    - "Aaaand it's an inhospitable hellhole..."
    ...
    - "We have discovered a new planet! This one has water!
    - "Yay!"
    - "Aaaand it's an inhospitable hellhole..."

    • @kbeautu200
      @kbeautu200 Год назад

      They are searching for nothing because we cant even go there.why not be contented what God give us.and just use those money to help people than burn those money outside our planet and will know those what they search is useless God surely made the universe for us not to discover thats why its far from each other

  • @tobysowers4668
    @tobysowers4668 2 года назад +7

    If a planet was as big as the picture used for this video, sadly, we would be crushed by the gravity

  • @grandpalarry7776
    @grandpalarry7776 2 года назад +32

    One thing you need to keep in mind is that much of what was stated in the video is only assumed. There is no visual verification of many of these 'facts' as no optical device/telescope can see these planets. Most information is based on solar transit and spectrographic studies. Based on this, any description of surface structures or even many other features of exoplanets is only speculation.

    • @stevenscott2136
      @stevenscott2136 2 года назад +14

      This is not stated nearly often enough in media! They're calculating the best they can with the most tenuous shreds of data.
      Imagine standing atop a building at night, in the rain, with a pair of scratched and chipped binoculars, and it's your job to dispatch all the city's police, fire, and ambulance services based on what you can see and hear. That's what exoplanet research is like.

    • @raidernation4696
      @raidernation4696 2 года назад

      Just like a round earth 😂

    • @fluentpiffle
      @fluentpiffle 2 года назад +1

      If anyone is going to defy all logic it would be NASA!
      "History abundantly shows that people's views of the universe are bound up with their views of themselves and of their society. The debate in cosmology has implications far beyond the realm of science, for it is a question of how truth is known. How these questions are answered will shape not only the history of science, but the history of humanity." (Eric Lerner, 1992)

    • @brazil3207
      @brazil3207 2 года назад +1

      @@raidernation4696 more like a flat earth

    • @SHADOW.GGG-
      @SHADOW.GGG- 2 года назад

      too true, we know fxxk all stop pretending we do

  • @jimmyzhao2673
    @jimmyzhao2673 2 года назад +32

    Before exoplanets were discovered, I remember reading what all the "experts" were saying about planet formation. like a star system 'needs' rocky planets close to the star, then big giant gas giants. Of course they were basing their theories on a sample size of 1. Just shows that so-called self proclaimed 'experts' can be so wrong about things.

    • @falseprophet1024
      @falseprophet1024 2 года назад +8

      To be fair, gas giants cant form inside the 'frost line' (iirc), so they just didnt think a jupiter would walk its way to the inner solar system..

    • @lanoa111
      @lanoa111 2 года назад +6

      @@falseprophet1024 Yeah, you just don't know what you don't know. It's a thing in everyday life no matter who you are. All you can do is live and learn.

    • @xayoribangs2449
      @xayoribangs2449 2 года назад +8

      They are experts though. Don't let perfection be the enemy of good.

    • @HA-ug4qu
      @HA-ug4qu 2 года назад +1

      People are going to take ur comment in a wrong way 😅 perfection is almost always out of the question but still the experts are there for a reason .

  • @TheMysteryVaultOfficial
    @TheMysteryVaultOfficial Год назад

    Great content. Thanks

  • @davidarbuckle7236
    @davidarbuckle7236 2 года назад +7

    I wonder how close it is to its star? Could it have moons as large as Earth and might they be in the habitable zone?

    • @Guitarman7133
      @Guitarman7133 2 года назад +1

      NO. THERE IS A DOME ABOVE US AT 73 MILES.

    • @gsquared8730
      @gsquared8730 2 года назад

      @@Guitarman7133 dude people still believe this crap?

  • @osrikking8785
    @osrikking8785 2 года назад +17

    All this diversity is only based on the first 5,000 planets we came across - imagine what the other trillions might turn out to be!

  • @whyyoumadbro2370
    @whyyoumadbro2370 2 года назад +14

    6:30 It's honestly the first time I've heard a star being turned into a planet. Really interesting

    • @welovephilippineswithmylov5419
      @welovephilippineswithmylov5419 2 года назад

      🤔

    • @Yora21
      @Yora21 2 года назад

      What really happened there is the same thing that happens to a white dwarf, just faster and earlier, before the white dwarf has reached its full size.

    • @IHaveBeenDoingTaxFraud
      @IHaveBeenDoingTaxFraud 2 года назад

      Some of them might not be stars and just brown dwarfs that lost their gas and what remains is their core

  • @sherrilltechnology
    @sherrilltechnology Год назад

    I love space it is quite incredible great video!!

  • @chriskwakernaat2328
    @chriskwakernaat2328 2 года назад +5

    2:55 Schrodingers water.

  • @logicaldude3611
    @logicaldude3611 2 года назад +17

    If it “defies all logic” then I have a newsflash, we have no idea what we’re talking about. These things are tiny specks on a high powered telescope, then ran through calculations based on that speck and its relation to other specks, and then the “theory” arrives.
    The ideas here are one of the problems of “popular science”… It’s not science.

    • @IHaveBeenDoingTaxFraud
      @IHaveBeenDoingTaxFraud 2 года назад

      Also the planet being larger than the neutron star its orbiting is completely normal, a neutron star with the same mass of sun would probably be smaller than earth

  • @ishankandari7849
    @ishankandari7849 2 года назад +5

    4:08
    ooh so that's where a nether portal takes you to in minecraft..

  • @t321-n7e
    @t321-n7e Год назад +1

    Sometimes I'm thinking, what if our entire universe is just an sand that belong to another earth and meanwhile that universe is just another sand belong to another earth and so on

  • @rajaosama3930
    @rajaosama3930 2 года назад +5

    Props to camera one for getting us these videos from such great distance