Webb's first glimpse of Jupiter and Mars with Dr. Heidi B. Hammel

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  • Опубликовано: 3 июл 2024
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    🐦 Follow Dr. Heidi Hammel on Twitter: / hbhammel
    00:00 Introduction
    00:54 Observing Uranus with JWST
    03:07 Uranus' Moons
    04:24 Webb's First Glimpse of Jupiter
    10:30 Ad: Squarespace
    11:43 Understanding Webb's Images of Mars
    18:04 Planned Observations Pluto, Saturn, and...
    19:33 Water Plumes of Europa and Enceladus
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    Earth
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    • Solar Orbiter Discover...
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Комментарии • 185

  • @LaunchPadAstronomy
    @LaunchPadAstronomy  Год назад +7

    🔴Catch Part 1 of my interview with Dr. Hammel about Neptune! ruclips.net/video/Y5sq0xr9EZU/видео.html

  • @beadyeyez
    @beadyeyez Год назад +54

    Keep up with the great content. Your channel NEVER uses click bait... just great, informative material. Thanks for sharing your knowledge with the world!

  • @FredPlanatia
    @FredPlanatia Год назад +41

    Heidi's a great scientist and her enthusiasm is wonderful. You've done a great job of integrating some scientific images into this interview. The images are gorgeous and fascinating.

    • @oldmech619
      @oldmech619 11 месяцев назад +1

      Thumbs up for Heidi. The images only become gorgeous and fascinating when we understand what the underlying science.

  • @blogtwot
    @blogtwot Год назад +26

    So glad I found this channel a few months ago. Great content once again and full of information for us space geeks.

  • @shaunhall960
    @shaunhall960 Год назад +1

    My grandmother got me interested in astronomy when I was a kid. She would absolutely love this is she were alive today. Incredible discoveries on the horizon!

  • @bulletdealer1704
    @bulletdealer1704 Год назад +3

    Space is so fascinating, I dont see how everybody doesn't eventually take a heavy interest in it.

  • @flyingmechanic1
    @flyingmechanic1 Год назад +11

    Great video as always! Its fascinating listening to someone as passionate and knowledgeable as her (and yourself of course), learning soo much watching your channel thank you!

  • @FelicianaDelacruz
    @FelicianaDelacruz Год назад +10

    What an incredible presentation. Dr. Hammel is an extremely knowledgeable presenter and your input really brought this to life. I ended up watching this twice and picked up more great information that I missed before. Jupiter is an incredibly interesting planet to study and learn about. Thank you and Dr. Hammel for bringing us this amazing and awesome presentation.

  • @scottdorfler2551
    @scottdorfler2551 Год назад +9

    Great astronomy content is so rare. I know when I see new Launch Pad Astronomy in my notifications I'm going to learn something today. Thanks for consistently releasing the best astronomy content! 🙏🖖🤘

  • @TheNickoslicK
    @TheNickoslicK Год назад +3

    Wow if they pull off analysis of the Plumes of Enceladus and Europa. That is exciting!

  • @TheSpiritoftheCocktail
    @TheSpiritoftheCocktail Год назад +5

    CHRISTIAN!!! This was awesome!!! Dr. Hammel def explained these images so even I could understand them!!! Jupiter is such an interesting planet!! CHEERS!!!!

  • @pepe6666
    @pepe6666 Год назад +1

    im only a low ranking nerd but i find things exciting. its wonderful seeing top-tier scientists being excited about stuff too

  • @tyharris78
    @tyharris78 Год назад +1

    So many scientist are excited about the JWST it’s fun watching them tryina explain complex things simply

  • @ariochiv
    @ariochiv Год назад +3

    She's very engaging. Great interview.

  • @tamblyn9484
    @tamblyn9484 Год назад +2

    Loved the video thank you, the panning of images on the side really took the video beyond informative!

  • @cavesalamander6308
    @cavesalamander6308 Год назад +2

    Partial reading during exposition! I thought it would be a nice feature to expand the dynamic range - and it exists! Oh, brilliant!

  • @SangheiliSpecOp
    @SangheiliSpecOp Год назад +3

    I didn't know that I would learn so much in this video, this was a great discussion and analysis of the JWST images of our nearby planets!

  • @juniorballs6025
    @juniorballs6025 Год назад

    Dr Hammel is incredibly engaged, and thus engaging. Makes for such a wonderful overall experience.

  • @yin-fire3263
    @yin-fire3263 Год назад +3

    Thanks for bringing us so much knowledge and knowledgeable people to explain and discuss this cutting edge technologies and science advancements.

  • @MarkHopewell
    @MarkHopewell Год назад +2

    Just shows how remote we are when we can't even view our near system neighbours in near real time except in a highly abstracted way with the best instrument we have available to us well into the 21st century.

  • @lovetogun3611
    @lovetogun3611 Год назад

    Those pictures of Uranus will be fantastic. We will be able to see Uranus up close and personal.

  • @stevenweller1673
    @stevenweller1673 Год назад +1

    New quality data from a reliable source. Priceless! Much appreciated and thank you very much!
    S.W.

  • @MrsTitina
    @MrsTitina Год назад +1

    She’s back!! Yay! 💃🏼🤩

  • @geekwithabs
    @geekwithabs Год назад +1

    Loved this talk with Heidi!

  • @4GibMe
    @4GibMe Год назад +2

    A new door has been opened. But, at this point only a crack. The content of this Video has just up my knowledge base another notch, as they always do. Thank you Prof Hammel and Prof Ready for your time on this. You have no idea much your time you set aside for this changes us all for the better.

  • @blackjaguar6909
    @blackjaguar6909 Год назад +1

    That was a treat to watch and listen to. Thank you

  • @mcwarrington
    @mcwarrington Год назад

    Wow! Thanks for uploading this fine interview. This is first-rate astronomy, exactly what I hope to find on YT. Cheers from New Zealand!

  • @wilson4019
    @wilson4019 Год назад +1

    Real deal. Love your video. Thank you.

  • @eric4232
    @eric4232 Год назад

    Thanks so much for keeping us updated on the JWT

  • @CM-re1vm
    @CM-re1vm Год назад +1

    I really enjoyed watching Heidi's interviews on the 2017 documentary The Farthest. Her love of the planets is contagious!

  • @audreye775
    @audreye775 Год назад +2

    really enjoyed this video

  • @paulbennett7021
    @paulbennett7021 Год назад

    Excellent stuff - and great logo.

  • @Jordy120
    @Jordy120 Год назад +1

    That was great! New sub here. I'm looking forward to more from Dr Hammel. Cheers.

  • @justexactlyperfectbrothersband
    @justexactlyperfectbrothersband Год назад +1

    "Science occurred"! I love it when that happens, as we say in Blighty its 'ace'. Someone else said that 50 years ago and stuck it on an album sleeve!

  • @andrewhudson3723
    @andrewhudson3723 Год назад

    Totally awesome images

  • @shawnl3151
    @shawnl3151 Год назад

    Can’t wait to see pictures of Uranus!

  • @javierfrutis3938
    @javierfrutis3938 Год назад +3

    I really enjoy your videos, the mission's complex features are easy to understad.
    I learn so much by watching you.
    Saludos.

  • @craigrathe2469
    @craigrathe2469 Год назад +1

    Images from JWST ... good
    Explanations by Christian of what im looking at ... great
    More nuance from an enthusiastic scientist ... the best, and mind blowing.
    keep up the great content.

  • @jeromehansen3969
    @jeromehansen3969 Год назад +1

    I’m gobsmacked. Thanks for your video.

  • @zachhoy
    @zachhoy Год назад

    really appreciate this level of detail

  • @sciencenerd7639
    @sciencenerd7639 Год назад +1

    This is great, thanks so much

  • @arunduvvuri7312
    @arunduvvuri7312 Год назад

    Excellent work.. Getting these legit people to talk about how Weare supposed to see it, is brilliant.

  • @tysonquock7688
    @tysonquock7688 Год назад +1

    Can't wait to see Uranus 🤗

  • @discoverymoi
    @discoverymoi Год назад

    Loved the knowledge of Dr Hammel, she is really smart by trying those risky observations.

  • @judgej1710
    @judgej1710 Год назад

    What a fantastic woman. She has such passion for her job. Love it.

  • @louislemire6691
    @louislemire6691 Год назад +1

    How refreshing.

  • @dr4d1s
    @dr4d1s Год назад +4

    I could not click on this video fast enough. I love your content and I get really excited when Dr. Heidi comes on. Recently I have been watching all of the Shoemaker/Levy 9 press conferences from '94 and it was really cool to see she was the lead of the team working on the imagining of the impacts with Hubble. Anyways I just wanted to share that little coincidence. Keep up the great work and I will keep watching!
    edit- You actually mentioned the S/L 9 impacts in the video. Guess I should have watched more before commenting.

    • @LaunchPadAstronomy
      @LaunchPadAstronomy  Год назад +3

      I couldn’t resist finding the SL-9 press conference footage!

    • @dr4d1s
      @dr4d1s Год назад

      @@LaunchPadAstronomy It's great footage and you can tell how excited everyone was. I was 9 when it happened and still remember watching those comet chunks hitting Jupiter. If anyone else wants to watch the footage just search for "comet impact tape 1-9" it's on the NASA STI RUclips page.

  • @bazpearce9993
    @bazpearce9993 Год назад

    Thanks for the info regarding Jupiter. I can now understand better what i'm seeing in my own images.

  • @xINVISIGOTHx
    @xINVISIGOTHx Год назад +1

    that's the first time i've seen the directions that jwst aims

  • @thaifreeburma
    @thaifreeburma Год назад

    Thank you so much for this wonderful window on to developing science thanks to this amazing instrument 👌👌✌️

  • @arik_dev
    @arik_dev Год назад

    19:17 Really happy to hear this. A risk-averse bias in what is chosen to be observed might cause us to miss more phenomena than if a mix of risky and non-risky observation targets is chosen.

  • @jonnyrockwell
    @jonnyrockwell Год назад

    I can’t wait to see Uranus!

  • @cavetroll666
    @cavetroll666 Год назад +1

    thanks for the video :)

  • @nicolasisaksson1175
    @nicolasisaksson1175 Год назад +1

    1:10 is gold

  • @alphacenturi8038
    @alphacenturi8038 Год назад

    Superb ! The lady is a go-getter.

  • @kumasenlac5504
    @kumasenlac5504 Год назад +2

    3:32 Given the revolutionary nature of integral-field spectroscopy, can we hope for an LPA segment on this sometime soon ? If a picture is worth a 1000 words and a spectrum is worth a 1000 pictures, how can you describe a thousand (1024) spectra ?

  • @llln13
    @llln13 Год назад +1

    I love the content! 🎃

  • @mehjabinvadivala5684
    @mehjabinvadivala5684 Год назад +1

    Jupiter looks so cool keep up the good work.😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊

  • @zenohamzi3714
    @zenohamzi3714 Год назад +3

    Hi Christian, whenever I get desperate to learn more, I reach out to you. Are you able to do a video on how do astronomers tell The difference between the light coming from a super nova versus that from a type 1a supernova. Also regarding the determination of the red shift, how do they work out what the original wavelength of the light being measured versus what is reaching us.

  • @unviversalyhappy
    @unviversalyhappy Год назад +2

    I did not realize that near infared and thermal infared were two different things

  • @danielungureanu430
    @danielungureanu430 Год назад +2

    Thank YOU! Maybe the sound level could be a little bit higher: I used my phones to the maximum to be able to hear in a public place.

    • @LaunchPadAstronomy
      @LaunchPadAstronomy  Год назад +1

      Glad you liked it! And sorry if the levels were a little low. Weirdly the levels were actually about the same as normal but the "thickness" of the sound was much less than what I can get in my studio. Oh well!

  • @erichaynes7502
    @erichaynes7502 Год назад

    Christian I just want to let you know I'm gnawing the arm off my chair waiting for your in depth report on how the Webb team solved the MIRI issue!

  • @jonathanosbornii3575
    @jonathanosbornii3575 Год назад +1

    Another great video! Is there a schedule for Keiper Belt/ planetary observations?

  • @Passacaglia43
    @Passacaglia43 Год назад +1

    “Whhhhhheeeeeennnnnn theeeeee
    Jovian skies/
    Are lit up for our eyes/
    That’s auroræ.”

  • @jesnoggle13
    @jesnoggle13 Год назад +1

    I’ve always wanted NASA to send a rover to Hellas Basin. Probably the last place water was on service ( except for newer impact areas).

  • @rhoddryice5412
    @rhoddryice5412 Год назад +1

    Awesome conversation.
    The list at 18:18 it would be interesting to have a look at it. Is it available somewhere?

  • @Nottooseriouss
    @Nottooseriouss Год назад

    That “soon” at 1:46!😂 dead

  • @SpultterFly
    @SpultterFly Год назад

    Love to see uranus too

  • @misterphmpg8106
    @misterphmpg8106 Год назад +3

    Thanks for your amazing video. You talked about JWST tracking Neptune. Which is the fastest moving object in our solar system (e.g. comet, asteroid etc.) that the JWST is capable of tracking? What would be too fast to track? Its probably an angular speed, not absolute value, so could you give examples for objects that could or could not be tracked? Thank you so much!

    • @LaunchPadAstronomy
      @LaunchPadAstronomy  Год назад +2

      Glad you liked it! You're right that it's ultimately about angular speed, which is governed by how fast the object is moving relative to Webb, and how close or far away it is. Webb tracked the impact of asteroid Dimorphous after the DART impact at a rate far beyond what it was designed to, and it worked!

  • @radioboyintj
    @radioboyintj Год назад

    I like looking at Uranus

  • @sirmicro
    @sirmicro Год назад

    What a brilliant woman

  • @Chyrre
    @Chyrre Год назад

    02:01: For Uranus I would think they would focus on the colonoscopy rather than the spectroscopy...
    [I was shown out]

  • @antonnym214
    @antonnym214 Год назад +1

    Most people don't know that Uranus is colder than Neptune, even though it is closer to the sun. ALSO Uranus has rings, and we're hoping Webb will get a nice view of those.

  • @lurchie
    @lurchie Год назад +1

    I love it when scientists get all geeky excited about new stuff in their fields.

  • @physicslover1950
    @physicslover1950 Год назад

    Hyper informative video from you again..
    Please make a video on Webb pillars of creation and what we have discovered new?
    Why the MIRI image looks so boring... Has the MIRI image revealed something new as compared to the NIRcam image.

  • @zapfanzapfan
    @zapfanzapfan 7 месяцев назад

    Fantastic details of Jupiter! Was it Io that was over exposed? A lot of heat from those 200+ volcanoes 🌋

  • @earlkjarbrown3753
    @earlkjarbrown3753 Год назад +2

    Long live the solar system!

  • @forestcityfishing4749
    @forestcityfishing4749 Год назад

    Wow, the great red spot has shrank quite a bit since 1970. I have an old altas here of the solar system from the 70's and can compare them.

  • @genehasenbuhler2594
    @genehasenbuhler2594 Год назад

    Question- has Heidi worked with the Hubble program? And if so has she heard of ROD BARTO?

  • @derricktalbot8846
    @derricktalbot8846 Год назад

    What she said: "Science occured."
    What she was thinking: "We scienced this SH!T out of this yo!"
    My guy! Her enthusiasm is contagious. I am about to toss hours into the "find Webb pictures" adventure :)

  • @nonamesl3f7duuude
    @nonamesl3f7duuude Год назад +1

    When will uranus window be open again?
    Sorry bout that, just passing through!

  • @richardshansky3040
    @richardshansky3040 Год назад

    6:10 Do all of those black dots represent tiny moons orbiting Jupiter?

  • @discoverymoi
    @discoverymoi Год назад

    1:18 I would really try to find another way to formulate that question.

  • @creepyoldhouseexplorersclub
    @creepyoldhouseexplorersclub Год назад +1

    Im interested in Uranus

  • @ohiocoder8313
    @ohiocoder8313 Год назад

    is JWST ever going to look at earth? would that give us any useful data, for comparisons perhaps?

  • @Corayzon
    @Corayzon Год назад +1

    Yay.

  • @PrimatoFortunato
    @PrimatoFortunato Год назад

    If a planet get reflected on lets say a few pixels of the sensor area, the spectroscopy must be really messy.
    Separating that continuous bandwith into its constituent parts must be an amazing work of intelect :-)

  • @blas_de_lezo7375
    @blas_de_lezo7375 Год назад

    wow.... i didnt know just HOW MUCH i didnt know...

  • @conanichigawa
    @conanichigawa Год назад

    Oh my God. We're gonna look at Sedna.

  • @gary122
    @gary122 Год назад

    What's all those little black spots everywhere? Looks like dust on the sensor??? Or dead pixels???

  • @rickwhite4137
    @rickwhite4137 Год назад

    Will it be possible to focus on the erath using Web?

    • @d-rockanomaly9243
      @d-rockanomaly9243 Год назад

      no because heat from the sun reflecting off it would damage it, according to his reply to a similar question

    • @rickwhite4137
      @rickwhite4137 Год назад

      @@d-rockanomaly9243 Just as I thought.

  • @TheSpiritoftheCocktail
    @TheSpiritoftheCocktail Год назад +3

    2nd?!?!?!?!?!?---------------------------->YESSSSSS!!!!

  • @maitlandmottmorency
    @maitlandmottmorency Год назад

    Are NASA folks required to say 'James Webb Space Telescope' in full vs. JWST or Webb?

  • @johnailshire966
    @johnailshire966 Год назад +1

    While watching part 2, the solar system graphic showed Saturn tumbling in its orbit around the sun. Every time I looked at it through my 10" telescope, it appears in the same orientat.. K don't have another 29 years. Can you tell its rate of tumble?

    • @LaunchPadAstronomy
      @LaunchPadAstronomy  Год назад +1

      Saturn maintains the same axial tilt throughout its orbit around the Sun, so it doesn’t tumble. I just rotated the photo to give some visual interest.

  • @spencerthompson1049
    @spencerthompson1049 Год назад +1

    We need Saturn 🪐 with Webb's instruments the rings would be insane right?

  • @SurfAddict
    @SurfAddict Год назад

    The nerds shall inherit the cool stuff.

  • @lilfeatha101
    @lilfeatha101 Год назад

    Miigwetch...thank you

  • @kennethlauer4735
    @kennethlauer4735 Год назад

    The I F U of Uranus will be fantastic

  • @kathymcbride2425
    @kathymcbride2425 Год назад

    good old astronomy

  • @jesnoggle13
    @jesnoggle13 Год назад

    Someday people will take a sightseeing tour of “Old Faithful on Enceladus”.