The Problem With AVATAR's Pandora that the Films Don't Want to Touch

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  • Опубликовано: 25 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 1,5 тыс.

  • @bignicebear2428
    @bignicebear2428 Год назад +4427

    If you have unobtanium, sure.
    The problem with unobtainum is that as soon as you get some, it becomes obtainedit.

    • @thearmchairspacemanOG
      @thearmchairspacemanOG Год назад +601

      it becomes gotsomeonium

    • @404mali
      @404mali Год назад +46

      @@thearmchairspacemanOG 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @AceSpadeThePikachu
      @AceSpadeThePikachu Год назад +97

      In theory it would also allow you to build a craft capable of drilling to the Earth's molten iron core to deposit several nuclear bombs in case our dynamo ever shut down.

    • @matheusveigamatveiga1995
      @matheusveigamatveiga1995 Год назад +28

      ​@@AceSpadeThePikachu i got the reference

    • @keirfarnum6811
      @keirfarnum6811 Год назад +41

      “Obtainedium”

  • @infernalchaos1066
    @infernalchaos1066 Год назад +1304

    I lived in Alaska for 23 years, and one of the best auroras I've ever witnessed had green, blue, violet, red, and white in it. And it really danced (meaning it moved and jumped around quickly. Some auroras just slowly drift by.) We even caught this on camera. Absolutely breathtaking.

    • @anonymousperson8487
      @anonymousperson8487 Год назад +16

      I lived in Toronto most my life, I moved 5 hrs east of Thunder bay 3 years ago. Seen about 5 Auroras so far but with no color, all were white and could be mistaken for clouds if the weren't so bright

    • @RK-cj4oc
      @RK-cj4oc 4 месяца назад +25

      Could you upload it to RUclips so we can see it?

    • @hillaryclinton1314
      @hillaryclinton1314 4 месяца назад +13

      S h a r e

    • @Ebb0Productions
      @Ebb0Productions 3 месяца назад +11

      Sir or Madam, you are morally obligated to share this beautful event with the rest of humanity. Upload at once and share the link here. Thank you!

    • @infernalchaos1066
      @infernalchaos1066 3 месяца назад +8

      I should mention that I have no video of this event. I was so in awe that I didn't think of it until later.

  • @jbrisby
    @jbrisby Год назад +994

    The notion of a habitable world orbiting a gas giant was explored in depth by Robert Sawyer's 'Quintaglio' books. The fact that the main continent was always pointed away from the gas giant let to a major plot point of what happened when explorers traveled to the far side of the moon for the first time, and discovered this gigantic object in the sky, which became their god.

    • @peglor
      @peglor 3 месяца назад +49

      It's heading for 30 years since I've seen anyone mention those books. Very enjoyable reading.

    • @Sabuufa
      @Sabuufa 3 месяца назад +17

      Sounds interesting, what are the books about?

    • @peglor
      @peglor 3 месяца назад +35

      @@Sabuufa The first 2 books are Galileo and Charles Darwin's stories, told through the medium of dinosaurs, where the society is quite different - individuals are highly territorial and go into a literal killing frenzy if there's too much crowding for example. I enjoyed reading them, when I last read them anyway, the fact I remember them at all after nearly 30 years is a testament to that.

    • @Sabuufa
      @Sabuufa 3 месяца назад +6

      @@peglor I think I will give the first book a try, thanks.

    • @marhawkman303
      @marhawkman303 3 месяца назад +3

      @@peglor A very different one that has a more high-tech look at it is "Catseye"... but there's like 100 novels with that in the name and I can't remember the author. Attempting to look it up failed. All I remember is the cover art is a partially glowing gas giant.
      Anyways...this one was a planet Humans colonized that wasn't inhabited when they got there. The name Cat's Eye for the gas giant is due to how it faintly glows on the night side. The cloud patterns partially obstruct the glow and thus it kinda looks like.. that.
      Notably in this story the moons orbits with a period similar to a month on Earth, and isn't tidally locked. But the day length is more like an Earth week. Which has the interesting effect of making nights a bit colder than Earth. Especially "true night" which is when you're on the part of the planet that is not lighted by either the sun or Cat's Eye. Oh yeah, it's also a bit colder than Earth. But that's due to being just a bit farther from it's sun.

  • @fink5546
    @fink5546 Год назад +2435

    Cameron has already revealed the main antagonist of the next film will be a fire tribe of na'vi similar to how there were water tribes in the latest film. If Pandora is tidally locked I'm fascinated by a possibility that there could be a "twilight" tribe that lives in this eternal darkness. A cinematic challenge no doubt

    • @rosyidharyadi7871
      @rosyidharyadi7871 Год назад +284

      Fire tribe? You aren't referring to other "Avatar"franchise, are you

    • @Sniperboy5551
      @Sniperboy5551 Год назад +11

      Twilight*

    • @fink5546
      @fink5546 Год назад +274

      @@rosyidharyadi7871 nope, Cameron has said that there will be a fire nation called the "ash people," and they'll be much less friendly than the water na'vi, probably playing a villain role in some capacity

    • @shlubbers1778
      @shlubbers1778 Год назад +374

      I hate to crush your hopes, but I think if it was tidally locked, it would be permanently facing the planet, not the star, so there would still be day and night time. But, depending on the axial tilt of both the moon and the planet, there could be some sort of twilight on the polar regions of the moon? Sort of like an eternal sunset?

    • @SubtleHawk
      @SubtleHawk Год назад +136

      There's still a day and night on the moon, it's just that one side always sees the gas giant and the other side never does.

  • @wasabista1613
    @wasabista1613 Год назад +4832

    If astronomers confirm that there is a gas giant orbiting Alpha Centauri, I hope they name it Polyphemus.

    • @Birbucifer
      @Birbucifer Год назад +126

      why would they name it after a cyclops shepherd?

    • @jeffbenton6183
      @jeffbenton6183 Год назад +193

      @Birbology ! Good point. If they find evidence that it once had a "Great Spot" - type cyclone (and only one such storm), but no longer does, then it might be a fun reference to the Odyssey (since Odysseus gouged out his only eye in self-defense). Of course by the time we get information *that* precise on the planet, we likely would've named it long ago.

    • @licansen3331
      @licansen3331 Год назад +4

      😂😂😂😂❤

    • @santiagovelezjaramillo38
      @santiagovelezjaramillo38 Год назад +62

      Don't bet. They didn't respect Bellerophon nor Osiris. The names given for the discoverers to the first extrasolar planets.

    • @Zmok
      @Zmok Год назад +174

      There should be international law, that if a science fiction work predict some phenomenon, and it is later discovered to be real, then it has to be named after that scifi.

  • @AlmostEthical
    @AlmostEthical Год назад +529

    If Pandora had a very short orbital period around Polyphemus, then it would be deep in the radiation belt. Better if it's more like Callisto's distance from Jupiter. But what sci-fi maker can resist close-ups of a gas giant? Cameron deserves a medal for restraint in not giving Polyphemus unrealistic rings.
    I think of the floating mountains like the giant wave in Interstellar - a scientifically implausible liberty taken because it's awesome in a movie that otherwise tries to ground itself in the possible. Ditto the giant tree.

    • @erdrickcapet3945
      @erdrickcapet3945 Год назад +22

      Came here to say just this and saw your comment. Anything that close to a gas giant, the amount of radiation bombarding that surface, I highly doubt anything could survive let alone flourish.

    • @AlmostEthical
      @AlmostEthical Год назад +23

      @@erdrickcapet3945 Yes, to live around a gas giant, you'd probably need far enough away from it for it not to look spectacular in the night sky. A shame, perhaps.
      Gas giants also have dangerously powerful magnetic fields.

    • @MDE_never_dies
      @MDE_never_dies 5 месяцев назад +34

      According to the wiki Pandora sits just outside the main radiation belts of the Gas Giant.
      During it’s transit of Polyphemus’s night side however, the moon passes through the planet’s magnetotail and gets an absolute walloping of radiation, leading to intense Aurora in the sky.
      Pandoran life is well adapted to resist such ionising radiation, however the humans need treatment for radiation sickness, have to take Iodine and seek radiation protection areas during solar storms.
      Pandora also has a strong Magnetic Field, given the existence of the “Flux Vortex” being an interaction between the planet and moon’s fields.
      The Unobtanium in the Moon’s core as it travels through Polyphemus’s field likely supercharges Pandora’s field.
      The thick atmosphere also provides some degree of shielding as well.

    • @M3sierr
      @M3sierr 4 месяца назад +5

      I like to think that Unobtainium is very sensitive to magnetic fields, just like how neodymium magnets have a much stronger magnetism than ceramic magnets

    • @Sanquinity
      @Sanquinity 4 месяца назад +15

      ​@Apeironn87 it is. Unobtainium in the movie is a room temperature super conductor. So yea it would be very sensitive to magnetic fields.

  • @d4rk0v3
    @d4rk0v3 Год назад +264

    Now that I've watched the whole video, I'm glad you touched on the aurora. That would be an indicator that Pandora has a magnetic field. Given that it is rich in superconducting minerals, this would only serve to enhance the magnetosphere of the planet. It makes sense that it would have one powerful enough to protect from the radiation belt.

    • @jameswilson5165
      @jameswilson5165 Год назад +11

      The Mother of all Mag fields! That close to a gas giant, it would fry.

    • @StuffandThings_
      @StuffandThings_ 4 месяца назад +6

      Now I'm wondering, wouldn't the magnetic field of the gas giant induce currents in Pandora? Especially if it has a large superconducting core? This should be more than enough to generate an absolutely monstrous magnetic field for Pandora, though the prospect of superconducting materials being able to remain superconductive in such conditions seems impossible.

    • @AndrewJohnson-oy8oj
      @AndrewJohnson-oy8oj 4 месяца назад +3

      It might also be both, with the strong magnetic field bringing the radiation down to levels survivable for the native life which evolved under it. (Which sadly means that the clock is ticking for Jake's son on the second movie.)

    • @marcleewinser8534
      @marcleewinser8534 28 дней назад

      Well, a magnetic Firld would help the Habitability along. Because this Field shields a Planet from solar Winds. Which is good, if You are interested of having an Atmosphere. You know - Breathing and Stuff...

  • @blazingstorm9351
    @blazingstorm9351 Год назад +168

    I'm a sucker for speculative biology so Pandora's ecosystem with the lands and creatures is what hooked me in the first place.

  • @SiriProject
    @SiriProject Год назад +608

    In China, Avatar 2 was surpassed by a local Chinese sci-fi epic called The Wandering Earth 2. I find it quite curious that both films deal with Alpha Centauri as the main target for human survival, and reflect on the limits of today's technology.

    • @licansen3331
      @licansen3331 Год назад +16

      Is Alpha centauri really is humanity last survival?

    • @licansen3331
      @licansen3331 Год назад +4

      @CosmoTube well yea I guess humans could go to other planets and reach destination to alpha centauri

    • @feiryfella
      @feiryfella Год назад +10

      @@CosmoTube-ox1ep Actually no! Solar sails can accelerate a spacecraft to a fair fraction of the speed of light!

    • @chriscarrol9373
      @chriscarrol9373 Год назад

      Chinese are just good at copying Americans ideas and inventions.

    • @elqueobserva7663
      @elqueobserva7663 Год назад +8

      ​@@CosmoTube-ox1ep
      That sounds epic

  • @WarmWeatherGuy
    @WarmWeatherGuy Год назад +1455

    There isn't enough surface area on the top of the floating mountains to collect enough rain to feed the waterfalls.

    • @trequor
      @trequor Год назад +229

      Best explanation i have is condensation. Water evaporated from the planet surface condense in the lower pressure and clings to the surface of the floating mountains, creating runoff

    • @AndrewJohnson-oy8oj
      @AndrewJohnson-oy8oj 4 месяца назад +143

      We only witnessed the floating mountains for moments. There is nothing saying that that was not a cumulative watershed effect that was only happening during that time. They might accumulate water for months and then cataclysmicly shed it over days.

    • @krzosu
      @krzosu 4 месяца назад +75

      @@trequor most superconductors need to be chilled to work properly - if unobtanium is naturaly chilling itself then that might be the case- aka not only it would make the mountains fly but it would make them kinda chilly thus making condensation on them easier - but then that would probaly impact the vegetation in negative way.

    • @sjh3217
      @sjh3217 3 месяца назад +22

      @@krzosu well according to the lore that isn't a problem for unobtainium - it remains superconducting right up to its melting point of over 1500 degrees, and for that reason it's used to control the antimatter reactions in the engines of the ISVs. The mineral interacts with the Pandoran flux vortices in such a way during its volcanic formation that it essentially crystallizes magnetic potentials at the quantum level within its structure.

    • @voradorhylden3410
      @voradorhylden3410 3 месяца назад +4

      Um the fouting mountains are from magnetic feilds. Why wouldnt the water flow along the gravity rings? End up in the same place the land did. Floating in this specific way.

  • @timschafer2536
    @timschafer2536 Год назад +800

    I could watch hours of just fictional documentaries set on pandora. The human conflict is something i oersonally would cut in favor of telling Navi Stories.

    • @Manj_J
      @Manj_J Год назад +94

      Yeah I second this, like I don't care for a story on human greed and war and conflict or anything, just show me the wonders and marvels of all the amazing animals and plants and different Na'vi groups on Pandora, please! Like we need a tv series of documentaries on just the Na'vi and the fauna and flora!

    • @ct1762
      @ct1762 Год назад +24

      @@Manj_J cringe

    • @Elite_Gamer_1337
      @Elite_Gamer_1337 Год назад +26

      really? you dont realize its just the same old stories with blue aliens?

    • @FLPhotoCatcher
      @FLPhotoCatcher Год назад +25

      I've never seen an Avatar movie. My religion forbids watching movies with blue, sentient creatures. J/K. Seriously though, many people have gotten 'spoiled' from seeing the beauty of a fictional world, and can't appreciate the real beauty of our amazing world. So, I'm not sorry that I didn't watch them. I probably will eventually.

    • @RM--
      @RM-- Год назад +3

      I haven't seen the new movie, but I loved the old movie as a kid. There's something about dystopian but still futuristic human culture that grips me, even if it's mostly American culture.
      It gets me moreso when there's interaction between two communities like that, first contact stories (and first contact by us, done wrong) fascinate me to no end because I loved coming up with ideas on how it could've been handled better and more peaceably.
      And I didn't even get to mentioning cool mechs or crazy VTOL craft juxtaposed with natives, they're so deeply detailed and I think it's because that's how the Navi would see them too. You'd have to be searching for weak points or things you can exploit so you kind of have to be looking for detail.

  • @physixtential
    @physixtential Год назад +329

    I really love the point you brought up about tribes on one side not even knowing they orbit a gas giant.

    • @sysomphonemanuthong3953
      @sysomphonemanuthong3953 Год назад +2

      Cartoons need there planets ship fleets? Try designing one in children cartons! The company pland was cooked about maintaining Pandora? Keep useing if on let's see who needs it more!

    • @sysomphonemanuthong3953
      @sysomphonemanuthong3953 Год назад

      Ag AQ it's not solid Lq.pure LQ can't frezzs! So freezer is limited on a diff side for cartoons re do! Thanks for rockets! 👽🚀⚖️🐝🕸️Spyder man don't work with bees! Retard! Extra is better? So others can use his black yellow mustard? So plants he don't do also! Just work with1/4 of Pandora and well see what the landing is! Cage is for size type. Rockets how stacks! If usa knows how to next sectional reasons to fine out .y freezers shape stuff was portol intrees also! When magic runs low are fades off does to not add to that planet! Spacex could have new about Pandora. The CD for the navigation planet?

    • @sjsomething4936
      @sjsomething4936 Год назад +35

      @@sysomphonemanuthong3953 I think your phone managed to do a pocket response to à RUclips comment, that was basically unintelligible nonsense.

    • @animeturnMMD
      @animeturnMMD 3 месяца назад +8

      ​@@sjsomething4936 It happens to me sometimes too, you type an answer in a hurry to notice later that you just write an unintelligible collection of nonsense. XD

    • @generaldelasmontanas2699
      @generaldelasmontanas2699 3 месяца назад +2

      @@sysomphonemanuthong3953 ?

  • @silverhowl9331
    @silverhowl9331 Год назад +85

    I add to the floating mountains as a possibility that they AREN'T non-living chunks of rock in the air, but a living organism that has other tiny organisms controlling it entirely similar to coral, they create billions of air sacs that help keep the organism afloat, and the surface of the organism looks like rock because of it's peculiar armor that it uses for defense and camoflauge. I speculate these organisms are preyed on by flying creatures that favor the tiny organisms that create the air sacs, and to protect themselves, they'll sometimes lower themselves down to the surface so that they can blend in with the mountainous regions they hail from.

    • @Obi_Wan_Kenobi_027
      @Obi_Wan_Kenobi_027 4 месяца назад +10

      Reminds me of the floating islands from Subnautica with this explanation

    • @vanzeralltheway8638
      @vanzeralltheway8638 4 месяца назад +14

      This is a nice answer, but it only works wonder under water because of the gas vs water huge difference in density. I take it, you mean that those huge mountain is actually and empty balloon that floats like zeppelin, right?
      Outside of the huge chunk of rock, we also see much smaller rocks along the root/vine that extend from the bigger rock. We can clearly see that these are pure rock with no floating power of their own. So those giant rocks also need to pull up the smaller rocks all around, including the vegetation on top of them all.
      Oh, vegetation.
      It would also be pretty hard for vegetation to grow on the mountain if most of its actual mass is actually hollow.
      That aside, i'm sorry that i also cant explain the floating mountain myself.
      Any kind of magnetic/electric/physical force that i can think of that can maintain it passively should be harmful to the living organism around it.

    • @CarbonatedGravy
      @CarbonatedGravy 3 месяца назад +4

      You clearly put a lot more thought into this than the writers did, but even then they would be bouncing around all over the place whenever anyone touches them and would certainly sink under the weight of all the vegetation and the dirt needed to support said vegetation
      Not to mention if it was a form of life it would be completely isolated from any food/nutrients, birds can’t fly forever for the same reason

  • @Loki_Loki01
    @Loki_Loki01 Год назад +268

    These avatar movies are different than just normal movies imo, they are more an experience and an escape from everything and i absolutely love them, especially at the cinema. Can't wait for the future avatar movies.

    • @pabloalonso9162
      @pabloalonso9162 Год назад +21

      yeah they’re visual experiences because the world is just pretty but poorly built and the story is bland, very very bland

    • @tylerdordon99
      @tylerdordon99 Год назад +7

      Explains why we will never get enough of these idiotic bland empty spectacles.

    • @eldrago19
      @eldrago19 Год назад +26

      ​@@pabloalonso9162 "poorly built" - I assume you didn't watch the video?

    • @kaasmeester5903
      @kaasmeester5903 4 месяца назад +4

      It's a fairly simplistic SF / Drama. But I recommend anyone to go see it in 3D in the cinema, it is a highly immersive experience unmatched by any movie, except perhaps "Sanctum" by the same director. Some would call the experience transformative, and personally I experienced some of what people described as "crashing hard from a high" when exiting the cinema after the movie ended.

    • @TheThreatenedSwan
      @TheThreatenedSwan 3 месяца назад

      @@eldrago19 They suck ass, sorry

  • @Theheadgiver
    @Theheadgiver Год назад +238

    I love Avatar but had no idea it was based in the Alpha star system. Thats awesome

    • @-TheMaskedMan-
      @-TheMaskedMan- Год назад +14

      When I heard that I was surprised too. I had no idea it literally takes place in our back yard. Our closes start system.

    • @justsean6199
      @justsean6199 Год назад +3

      @@-TheMaskedMan- it’s literally a film

    • @-TheMaskedMan-
      @-TheMaskedMan- Год назад +28

      @@justsean6199 It is??? I was really hoping to visit the Navi sometime 2040😔🙄

    • @MentalParadox
      @MentalParadox 3 месяца назад +2

      @@justsean6199 And?

    • @ssssnnnnzzzz
      @ssssnnnnzzzz 3 месяца назад

      i thought it was just a moon of jupiter

  • @Rudeman84
    @Rudeman84 Год назад +231

    I would love a video about The Expanse. Imho it is a very possible future - at least the technology and the story of colonizing on mars and the belt.

    • @jerlinej3516
      @jerlinej3516 Год назад +25

      Yes, The Expanse!

    • @jadenantal1652
      @jadenantal1652 Год назад +24

      Damn that was a good show, I might rewatch that again thanks

    • @alveolate
      @alveolate Год назад +15

      sadly it's on indefinite hiatus since s6 :(

    • @jadenantal1652
      @jadenantal1652 Год назад +2

      @@alveolate I guess bright side is you got a chance to watch other shows 🤷‍♂️

    • @taterkaze9428
      @taterkaze9428 Год назад

      The Expanse isn't "very possible", in its general contours it's the future. There will be space mining for the simple reason that (eventually) it will cost less to mine iridium and other high-value elements in the asteroid belt than on Earth. Mining creates settlements, as we've seen over millennia of human history. Settlements bring society, which spawns other industries. Now you've got a space economy. Putting aside the drama and liberties taken with scientific details, The Expanse nailed our future.

  • @ApexPredatorWithSungGlasses
    @ApexPredatorWithSungGlasses Год назад +85

    Next tackle How Realistic Is the World of Three Body Problem by Liu Cixin

  • @globalcitizen8321
    @globalcitizen8321 Год назад +188

    One interesting issue regarding a tidally locked moon (which would be almost all moons in most star systems) would be that there would be a higher prevalence of the night and twilight compared to light day. This is not necessarily a bad thing, on the contrary: The gas giant would shelter and act as a shield, diminishing the amount of harmful radiation that could reach from the star. Also, as the star development during millions of years increases the amount of radiation and heat, the moon would be able to adapt much easily than a planet to such changing conditions, thus protecting life.

    • @nagillim7915
      @nagillim7915 Год назад +27

      The radiation from the planet is the biggest problem for life. If unobtanium is a superconductor, though, its occurrence on Pandora could mean a far bigger magnetosphere than a moon would generally have.

    • @feiryfella
      @feiryfella Год назад +10

      @@nagillim7915 Bioluminescence can protect against radiation and flares from an M class star. There's a lot published about it.

    • @foosic1742
      @foosic1742 Год назад +5

      Wouldn't the higher prevalence of night time compared to day (at least on the side facing the gas giant) create a runaway cooling effect? If there's more night than day, then wouldn't it cool down more than the day can heat it up, essentially covering the facing-side of the moon in ice?
      I was thinking of this while watching and trying to imagine a reason why this *wouldn't* happen, but couldn't think of one.

    • @nagillim7915
      @nagillim7915 Год назад +4

      @@foosic1742 - depending on the size of the gas giant it might be giving off large amounts of infrared generated by its own gravitational contraction. That could heat the side of the moon facing the planet. And that's assuming the moon is tidally locked, which will largely depend on its distance from the gas giant and their relative masses.
      If the moon is tidally locked then its day/night cycle will be determined by its orbit around the planet and not its own rotation around its axis. The length of that day/night cycle as well as the diameter of the moon and the thickness of the atmosphere will largely determine the climate. If Pandora is less than half the size of Earth then you'd need to half the length of the day/night cycle to about 12 hours to keep an atmospheric circulation pattern like Earth's: the coriolis effect has to be high enough to form Hadley cells in the tropics and a polar front or else atmospheric circulation collapses down to a single cell per hemisphere, meaning equatorial jungles, icy polar deserts and nothing but cool semi-arid scrub and savannah between the two. There'd be no jetstream, no temperate rain bands, no deciduous or taiga forests, no bread baskets of civilisation.

    • @larrystevens7410
      @larrystevens7410 Год назад

      @wildfirex666 Who's in the what now? Is that a sarcastic joke? If not, what the hell are you on about?

  • @taseenmuhtadi513
    @taseenmuhtadi513 Год назад +15

    As a Communications Engineering graduate, I found this video extremely interesting. The technology itself was astounding and the explanations were outstanding. Such videos would have been very helpful in my student life.

  • @CC-ns2ds
    @CC-ns2ds Год назад +20

    I think unobtainable is the most interesting thing about this franchise. It’s a superconductor that has a magnetic field which is not what we observe in reality. Such a sci-fi metal would allow us to make extremely powerful and controlled magnetic fields. So yes the mountains do act as a sort of magnet probably being drawn to Polyphemus’ magnetic field until it gets to an altitude where gravity takes over so you get various mountains floating at various altitudes.

  • @captainzappbrannagan
    @captainzappbrannagan Год назад +65

    I would like to see the science of a plant based neural link to animals and restoring consciousness via its connections too. Supposedly there was an intense battle scene he cut from the movie because of current world events and violence but I bet it was stellar, hope its in the extended cut.

    • @vylbird8014
      @vylbird8014 4 месяца назад

      It makes no sense biologically, but there's always the possibility the whole planet was engineered by a lost civilisation.
      Perhaps they will return in great annoyance to find that their system administrators have forgotten their duty and some upstart savages are mining the computational substrate for shiny rock.

    • @Keithustus
      @Keithustus 2 месяца назад +3

      kind of like how mushrooms and trees NOW communicate information, but add animals

  • @michaeljf6472
    @michaeljf6472 Год назад +183

    Based on the changing position of Polyhemus in the sky during both movies, Pandora is not tidaly locked. Sometimes we see it high in the sky, sometimes just touching the horizon, and a few times intersecting it.

    • @JulesStoop
      @JulesStoop Год назад +25

      But are those in shots taken from (approximately) the same location on the surface?

    • @Sanquinity
      @Sanquinity 4 месяца назад +16

      ​@JulesStoop they were likely at least in the same area. Like maybe an area of a few hundred km tops. Since the humans could reach all the na'vi areas with ground vehicles in seemingly relatively short time. And most na'vi travel was done on ground level as well.

    • @damianmandras8283
      @damianmandras8283 4 месяца назад +1

      But isnt centauri an red dwarf ? This makes it less stable with makes life less plausible the long term

    • @Sanquinity
      @Sanquinity 4 месяца назад

      @@damianmandras8283 Correction, life as we know it. There could be intelligent life out there that's a lot more adapted to high radiation and the like. Heck there could be intelligent life out there that we might not even immediately recognize as life. We only have 1 example of life after all, our own planet. A laughably small sample size to make generalizations about what is and isn't possible for life.
      And red dwarfs can be active for literally trillions of years (by comparison, our sun will die after around 10 billions years total) That's a lot of time for even the smallest of chances to become a reality.

    • @FrankyLon
      @FrankyLon 4 месяца назад +8

      @@damianmandras8283 Proxima Centauri is, but Centauri A and B are both main sequence yellow dwarfs and Pandora orbits a gas giant which orbits Centauri A according to the movie.

  • @goyoelburro
    @goyoelburro Год назад +18

    I LOVE your videos!!! Not just narration, you provide opinions, and delve deep. Providing extra content like this just adds to the interest.
    THANK YOU!

  • @juanleuschner7457
    @juanleuschner7457 Год назад +12

    Very good vid. I have to point out though that oxygen is not why dinosaurs got as big as they did. A combination of hollow bones, efficient breathing and egg laying. During some periods oxygen was actually lower, yet dinosaurs still remained large. Although this is just a nitpick. Again great video

  • @jacksonbarkerthebluehairedfox
    @jacksonbarkerthebluehairedfox Год назад +94

    I'm just a major fan of anything bioluminescence, which made me fall in love with the world of Pandora very quickly . I just wonder how likely it is for planets dominated with bioluminescent life to exist out there.

    • @jeffbenton6183
      @jeffbenton6183 Год назад +18

      I mean certain parts of our ocean fit that description. I suppose the question is how likely it is that the surface and atmoshere of a planet would be dominated by bioluminescent life.

    • @jacksonbarkerthebluehairedfox
      @jacksonbarkerthebluehairedfox Год назад +12

      @@jeffbenton6183 Yes. This is what I mean. Just imagine walking through a bioluminescent version of Central Park in Manhattan. Or perhaps how we can possibly use bioluminescent plants and life to our advantage such as a replacement for streetlights.

    • @abhayprasad5319
      @abhayprasad5319 Год назад +7

      @@jacksonbarkerthebluehairedfox I think in india we have forest of bioluminescent actually there are some mushrooms, Herb's and plants which glow in dark in monsoon ( rainy season) it glows more you can visit it

    • @blacksage2375
      @blacksage2375 Год назад +6

      The question is what bioluminescence does for life on Pandora?
      Like flowers are bright to attract pollinators while fruit is bright to get animals to eat it and defecate the seeds out elsewhere. Seeing the abundance of bioluminescence in plant life on Pandora might be wanting to imply a similar function... BUT why is this actually better then just simple bright colors seen in daylight? Answer: it very probably is not because maintaining that pretty glow (well beyond anything you see here on earth) all night ends up needing too many resources for any extra attraction factor. They'd be out competed.
      You could still force a confirmation bias with more explanation, like maybe Pandoran animals can't detect regular colors well enough, but we know this isn't true of the Na'vi so why not others?

    • @PainterVierax
      @PainterVierax Год назад +9

      @@blacksage2375 The answer is simple: there is so much bioluminescence and only tammed eclipse "night" because it's a movie searching to be visually appealing. An horror film like Pitch Black did the absolute opposite choice to serve the scenario.
      There is no point to search scientific explanations inside that Pocahontas rip-off blockbuster series. It's really not that deep in every level.

  • @caiocbcn
    @caiocbcn 3 месяца назад +25

    Wanna know the biggest problem with the "we took all resources from earth, now we going to get more from other planets" plot?
    It's that if you have the technology from avatar, then you can get an almost unending amount of resources in our solar system. The asteroid belt between mars and Jupiter alone is supposed to contain more water in ice form then a thousand earths, and the amount of rare metals in there is absurd. So they made up some "unobtainion" sci-fi stuff because making an actual good plot is hard. Hell, look at dune. They actually pulled an "unobtainion" before the term was even invented, but the book is so well written that it makes complete sense.

    • @MirandaAndUh
      @MirandaAndUh Месяц назад

      They don't go to Pandora due to a lack of resources, they go there to mine Unobtanium which fuels the industry that in turn rapidly depletes Earth's resources. The idea is that humanity is unfit to ethically utilize Unobtanium due to industrial/corporate greed. Them turning to Pandora in the second film is a colonization effort as consequence of those actions.

    • @caiocbcn
      @caiocbcn Месяц назад +1

      @@MirandaAndUh Unless that's stated in the second movie, I never heard that before. I do know they say earth will die in the second movie without unobtanium for some reason, that reason being "we did not though about that AGAIN", just like they didn't think about how after the first movie earth would just send a real full on army and just orbital bombard every single part of Pandora with any semblance of life. Oh right, it's because that's not something that happens on dance with wolves.

    • @MirandaAndUh
      @MirandaAndUh Месяц назад

      That's not what they say at all, by the way. It seems paying attention is beyond your abilities, so I'll just clarify that they're not saying Earth will die without Unobtanium (which is also not the case in the first movie) but that it is dying because it has been depleted of its natural resources... a result of Unobtanium usage. Why is it always these people who insist Avatar is just Dances With Wolves like a bunch of preprogramed goons that don't understand the entire point of the movie?

    • @caiocbcn
      @caiocbcn Месяц назад

      @@MirandaAndUh So, earth is dying because of lack of resources related with the manufacturing of unobtainable. And how exactly that is different from LACK FO RESOURCES IN GENERAL?
      Also, yes, it is just dance with wolves BUT WORST.
      And thanks for proving my point by attacking me instead of offering an actual response. You want to gush about the blue furries and the "humans be evil... Because!" narrative vomited by a hack who claims that testosterone is toxic, then expect that some of us who actually read a book or two and developed some standards to not be so easily swayed by the pretty colours.

    • @Taronyu_SVK
      @Taronyu_SVK Месяц назад

      @@caiocbcn Earth is dying because the biosphere is collapsing. It was revealed in the game, so lack of resources have nothing to do with it. Humans are not evil in Avatar universe, only RDA is. What they are doing to Pandora, they did to Earth before. Later in the movies, Earth will be of course saved and humans and Na'vi will live in peace. And Cameron never said that testosterone is toxic, that was a hoax based on misinterpretation of his words.

  • @Roach9994
    @Roach9994 Год назад +31

    Unfortunately the company adverised at the end of your video is a scam. You should vet your advetisers more thoroughly

  • @user-dt7vt3cm2b
    @user-dt7vt3cm2b Год назад +11

    I think the mountains wouldn’t be possible under two teslas, as stated in the movie. Superconductor or not, that would require about 100000 Tesla to lift those mountains which is like magnetic field of neutron star.
    In that magnetic field, your blood will fly one way, while water will fly another.

  • @mindmind1773
    @mindmind1773 Год назад +221

    We can feel that James Cameron takes good care to polish every little detail in his movies ! that's what makes them so great !
    There is only one thing that bother me with Avatar: All the fauna seems to have evolved to a 6 limbs creatures! the na'vi are the only exception to that! does that mean some catastrophy happened? or maybe even the na'vi are alien to this world? We can go very far and think that maybe they are the result of the human federation experiment to create a humanoid creature on this planet! hence the avatar program !

    • @ancientcolors
      @ancientcolors Год назад +44

      I think it´s more likely the na´vi do just occupie a different ecological niche, which favors four limps.

    • @kieramcadams4103
      @kieramcadams4103 Год назад +33

      @@ancientcolors But every other mammal-like creature, including the small pseudo-primate from the first movie has six limbs.

    • @sighberspook2021
      @sighberspook2021 Год назад +89

      There actually is an explanation for why the Na'vi have 4 limbs in the first movie, though it is hard to explain without images.
      Basically the Na'vi are not the only 4 limbed creatures on pandora, in the first movie we see creatures called Prolemurus who are the closest living relative of the Na'vi, like the Na'vi they have lost 2 of their 4 eyes, have lost one of their neural queues and have hair on their heads, most importantly they have 2 and a half limbs, they used to have 6 limbs but over time their 2 sets of forelimbs have fused up to the elbow
      Not only that but the prolemurus have 2 fingers on each of their 4 hands and the Na'vi have 4 fingers on each of their 2 hands which leads us to presume that in the evolutionary history of the Na'vi they ones had 4 forelimbs each ending in 2 fingered hands which then fused over time
      The prolemurus are a living missing link between the Na'vi and the other animals of pandora
      This whole thing will be a lot easier to understand if you look up what prolemurus looks like, their arms are pretty interesting
      This fusing of limbs is the reason why Na'vi also can't punch, their arms just aren't developed for it, their hand and wrist bones arent built to take the impact

    • @sighberspook2021
      @sighberspook2021 Год назад +19

      ​@@kieramcadams4103 the prolemurus don't actually have 6 limbs or 4, they are in a stage of transition from 6 limbs to 4 limbs, the same way that the Na'vi lost their extra limbs due to the 4 forelimbs fusing together

    • @Zeder95
      @Zeder95 Год назад +14

      There are lemur-like creatures on Pandora that have 4 partially merged arms, the upper part of the arms is merged into one while the part below the elbow is split into 2 pairs of arms. Maybe they are an inbetween step of the evolution of the Na'vi where their 4 arms fully merged into 2 arms. Or maybe they just lost a pair of limbs over time like how whales lost their hind limbs.
      Or maybe the Na'vi just have different lines of ancestors than the other creatures there.

  • @MrFluteboy1980
    @MrFluteboy1980 Год назад +14

    What would the planet's gravity do to the moon? Thinking about about the inner moons of Jupiter are basically ripped apart by the intense gravity of Jupiter

    • @Zeder95
      @Zeder95 Год назад +6

      It would have more volcanic activity, but that wouldn't make it uninhabitable. Earth has quite a lot of volcanic activity as well compared to other planets in our solar system after all.

  • @austinsapp5867
    @austinsapp5867 Год назад +20

    Never thought I'd see this video happen. I admire all your material... and I also really like Avatar, so this is a nice bonus for me.

  • @glennledrew8347
    @glennledrew8347 Год назад +51

    I've wondered about the factor of the Roche limit. A body of given size/density, if located within the Roche limit of the parent body it orbits, will be torn apart by tidal stress. This is the cause of Saturn's ring system. Visually it seems possible that Pandora might be too close to remain intact.

    • @TobeWilsonNetwork
      @TobeWilsonNetwork 3 месяца назад +5

      Roche limit gets in the way with many cool science fiction worlds unfortunately. Pandora really does look super close

    • @Statsy10
      @Statsy10 3 месяца назад +2

      This is an interesting question. It's the reason IO is so geologically active, as it gets pulled on by Jupiter (as well as the other moons).

    • @BlakeWilder-n1u
      @BlakeWilder-n1u Месяц назад +1

      Same reason why moons of saturn and jupiter have subsurface oceans

  • @Dr.Reason
    @Dr.Reason Год назад +24

    While I have never been infatuated with the Avatar movies I have really enjoyed your realistic exploration of them.

  • @Vodhin
    @Vodhin Год назад +38

    Floating mountains are probably unlikely as depicted in the film. Perhaps if there are some magnetic forces involved, maybe combined with gravitational effects of the gas giant the moon orbits (so floating mountains would only be on the side facing Polyphemus?), and toss in a thick enough atmosphere and make the mountains out of material that's relatively low mass to boost their buoyancy. Like Alex mentions in this video, I agree that the waterfalls just wouldn't happen - aside from where all that water is coming from, would whatever forces that allow the floating land allow for the water to fall instead of just float away?

    • @mrviking2mcall212
      @mrviking2mcall212 Год назад +8

      If the magnetic forces were enough to lift rocks, unobtainium or not, they’d practically rip the iron right out of living creatures’ bloodstreams.

    • @TanyaG-yv9eq
      @TanyaG-yv9eq 24 дня назад

      Dew

    • @TanyaG-yv9eq
      @TanyaG-yv9eq 24 дня назад

      ​@@mrviking2mcall212😮

  • @AnakinSkywalker-mm3gi
    @AnakinSkywalker-mm3gi Год назад +30

    You can count on Astrum to change the thumbnail and title 5 times within a day for new videos 😂😂😂😂

    • @baby.nay.
      @baby.nay. Год назад +3

      @@SeriouslyWeirdDream yea it’s unprofessional and annoying though .

  • @absentfish1706
    @absentfish1706 Год назад +39

    Small correction: it is not widely accepted that during the Mesozoic era there were more oxygen than now. As far as I know, most experts do not think it's true, and there is no evidence of it. Other than that, it's a really nice video. I learned a lot, thank you!

    • @jeffbenton6183
      @jeffbenton6183 Год назад +4

      I heard before from a documentary that there was considerably more oxygen back then. That doesn't mean it's true of course, but there must've been some reason why some scientists (or at least science enthusiasts) in the past thought that there was more oxygen back then. Would you happen to know where this idea came from?

    • @absentfish1706
      @absentfish1706 Год назад +6

      @@jeffbenton6183 Unfortunatly, I do not know what is the exact source of this idea. However, it looks to me like it is really old (I might have seen something like it in old russian textbooks, but I am not shure about that). After some searching, It appers that it is not so much the lack of evidence, as absence of consensus. As a modeling study from 2016 states: "The results of such studies differ greatly, to the extent that today’s atmospheric mixing ratio of 21% might be either the highest or lowest level during the past 200 m.y. " (Benjamin J.W. Mills et al, 2016). It seems that different studies look at different aspects (like air trapped in ancient amber, gasses trapped in rocks and paleobotanical evidence), and all of their results do not really agree with each other. I am not an expert in this field, far from it, but if I had to bet, I would say that Mesozoic was a thery long era and surely O2 levels flactuated during it, but I doubt that they ever reached anything close to the Carboneferous, and most likely were much closer to the modern levels.

    • @MightyBOBcnc
      @MightyBOBcnc Год назад +11

      @@absentfish1706 Maybe confusion with the Carboniferous O2 levels is a reason for the idea's spread.

    • @adamjohnson6016
      @adamjohnson6016 Год назад

      I only remember reading about them being higher during the Cretaceous period rather than the entirety of the Mesozoic era. But I have never been exposed to a consensus the other directly, interesting.

    • @igameidoresearchtoo6511
      @igameidoresearchtoo6511 Год назад +4

      @@absentfish1706 Air, or gasses in general, can easily diffuse through thin solid matter.
      Amber is generally not large and thick enough to not allow diffusion of air particles and molecules.
      Gasses in rocks however might be the best we have as evidence of past atmosphere mixtures.
      Despite this even gasses trapped in rocks don't show much signs of high O2 levels in the past.

  • @edwardlarsen8658
    @edwardlarsen8658 Год назад +12

    What about tides on Pandora??? Since, according to your video, Pandora is not tidally locked with its home planet, and since the home planet is MUCH larger (and presumably more massive) than Pandora itself, then the tidal effects of the home planet on Pandora's oceans would be ENORMOUS. On Earth, with a relatively small single moon, we experience tides that can often range from 10-20 feet, depending on the local geography. On Pandora, the tides would be immensely bigger. This would have major consequences for any areas near a Pandoran ocean.

    • @Taronyu_SVK
      @Taronyu_SVK 5 месяцев назад

      Pandora is tidally locked, so there are no tides.

  • @Kuhesgewehr
    @Kuhesgewehr 4 месяца назад +25

    They went to all that effort for the world building and then made a plot that was pretty awful and badguys who were more two dimensional than cardboard cutouts...

    • @mattheww1930
      @mattheww1930 3 месяца назад +6

      And tbf the bad guys were in all honesty cooler than anything the Na'vi had

    • @hx20games77
      @hx20games77 3 месяца назад

      JC Avatar might have its flaws but they are still good films

  • @alankaufman385
    @alankaufman385 3 месяца назад +5

    P.S. "Unobtanium" is a silly name for Pandora's Anti-gravity mineral. A better, more appropriate, name would have been "Upsidaisyum".(with apologies to Rocky and Bullwinkle).

  • @erasmus_locke
    @erasmus_locke Год назад +20

    I would love to see more videos like this talking about fictional space settings.

    • @dougkippen4971
      @dougkippen4971 Год назад +2

      Same. I've often wondered just how feasible some of the science in movies is e.g. Dune's ornithopters.

  • @Mr.Sequiro
    @Mr.Sequiro Год назад +16

    Not going to lie... when I clicked I was thinking Pandora from Borderlands...

  • @TheBlueCreeper-
    @TheBlueCreeper- Год назад +15

    Seeing this video talks about many speculative biology topics, Id recommend the channel Curious Archive. They have a series dedicated to these kind of works. Not just alien biology but fantasy biology and also how life on Earth would be like millions of years in the future. Etc.

  • @chris-terrell-liveactive
    @chris-terrell-liveactive Год назад +13

    Good video, thank you. I wasn't hooked by the Avatar storyline but the film is beautiful. A similar video on the planets shown in Interstellar or Dune (Arrakis) would be good.

  • @robertdonatiello870
    @robertdonatiello870 Год назад +6

    Dan Simmons’ ‘Hyperion’ written in the 80s has floating islands that are explained to be fully alive with motility and sentience .. perhaps the inspiration?

  • @MonkeySimius
    @MonkeySimius Год назад +4

    I've never had an interest in these movies. So I am pleasantly shocked at how much they thought about the world building as far as the environment goes. I probably wouldn't notice it consciously while watching but subconsciously it would make the film reality vibe alive.

  • @Eren______
    @Eren______ Год назад +3

    About the “Unobtanium”,
    I think it can actually be metallic hydrogen, which is known to be a room temperature superconductor. That way it can stay suspended in the magnetic flux, thus creating the hallelujah maintains and everything else.
    According to some of the theories, immense pressure inside the big gas giants can create metallic hydrogen and this metallic hydrogen can keep its metallic state even after there is no pressure.
    My theory is that, in the past, two gas giants may have been collided and the metallic hydrogen got thrown out. After some time, just like our moon, pandora could be created from the debris cloud.

  • @kirbymarchbarcena
    @kirbymarchbarcena Год назад +7

    I still don't understand how humans can jibe the time and date during interstellar travel with the time and date used on Earth

  • @abhijithp2116
    @abhijithp2116 Год назад +35

    Perhaps somewhere far away in another Galaxy or within our Galaxy there may be world like Pandora..... we will never meet them neither they will , they are busy in their own life and we too 💔💔💔

    • @licansen3331
      @licansen3331 Год назад +4

      I mean yea obviously There's gonna be life in another planet cuz millions of galaxies

    • @Tasorius
      @Tasorius 3 месяца назад +3

      After watching the two Avatar movies, do you really want humanity to get out of this solar system alive? I think it's best if humanity dies on this planet, and doesn't spread anywhere else.

    • @iamrightoutsideyourwindowhello
      @iamrightoutsideyourwindowhello Месяц назад +1

      @@Tasorius Starting with you.

  • @ivan-Croatian
    @ivan-Croatian Год назад +12

    I wish aliens in movies would not look like us, with typical head, hand and legs. I wish the producers have little bit more imagination.

    • @philipthecow
      @philipthecow 3 месяца назад +1

      To be fair, convergent evolution means the Na'vi could plausibly look human.

    • @Tasorius
      @Tasorius 3 месяца назад +2

      Their imagination was full of nothing but making a beautiful world only to add humans in there and ruin everything by war.
      And they had a lot of whale hunting on their minds. But they never imagined a good plot...

  • @asphere8
    @asphere8 Год назад +8

    Theres an old MMO that never had much popularity called Shores of Hazeron. Habitable moons orbiting gas giants were always my favourite places to colonize. Theyre so pretty!

    • @eekee6034
      @eekee6034 3 месяца назад

      Mine too. :) I have ideas for a planet pack for KSP & JNO, maybe one of these days I'll get around to making it.

  • @Icetea-2000
    @Icetea-2000 4 месяца назад +6

    10:15 You're thinking of the insects of the Carboniferous, Dinosaurs did not grow this large because of higher oxygen concentration. Insects heavily benefit from this and are size limited by oxygen levels because their way of taking in oxygen involves the oxygen just passively diffusing into their skin. The larger any object gets, the interior volume grows at a faster rate than its surface, meaning that a larger insect has to be able to provide a larger body with relatively less skin to breathe with, limiting their size depending on the oxygen levels. But that’s not how lungs work, and Dinosaurs were not breathing these insanely high levels of oxygen as in the Carboniferous anyway
    In fact, the oxygen levels of the Mesozoic, the era of the Dinosaurs, was estimated (relative to modern levels) at 80% in the Triassic, 120% in the Jurassic, and 150% in the Cretaceous Period.
    This wouldn’t explain the Sauropods, the largest land animals of all time, existing since the Triassic

  • @tranchedecake3897
    @tranchedecake3897 4 месяца назад +3

    8:42 That would also mean that Na'vi on the Polyphemus-facing side of Pandora could use it as a point of reference for travelling, just as humans used stars, thus Na'vi on this side being much more connected (commercially, culturally...) than on the other side, or they could just have a much poorer knowledge of astronomy

  • @zacharysway575
    @zacharysway575 Год назад +3

    You should discuss the concept of the planet being almost a supercomputer, considering how the root systems and all the life connect and act as almost a brain… really cool to think about

    • @CaptainPilipinas
      @CaptainPilipinas 7 месяцев назад

      meanwhile, dropping off a single, or at least two more BOR7 unit(s) on that said-rock, and then sit back and let those said-Old One era/pre-Sirius era units do their....work.

    • @Tasorius
      @Tasorius 3 месяца назад +1

      You mean exactly like the symbiosis between mushrooms and trees in the real world? Mycelial networks connect trees, allow them to communicate with each other, and help to bring water to the trees.

  • @DreamOfFlying
    @DreamOfFlying Год назад +3

    Yooo! Didn’t think a video like this would come out!

  • @wolfpackastrobiology3690
    @wolfpackastrobiology3690 Год назад +3

    @10:21 , more oxygen in the atmosphere didn't allow dinosaurs to grow bigger. Blue whales are larger than dinosaurs so if that was the limiting factor, they couldn't have gotten that big.
    This is compounded by two facts:
    1. Dinosaurs likely had the highly efficient unidirectional respiratory system characteristic of birds (which allows them to exert themselves at altitudes at which we'd asphyxiate at).
    2. Blue whales are holding their breath the majority of the time and usually use ~85% of the oxygen that they inhale.
    So relatively low concentrations of oxygen in the atmosphere would have an even larger impact on a whale than it would a sauropod dinosaur.

  • @socalstr
    @socalstr Год назад +6

    What about the tides created by the gas giant’s gravity so close to Pandora? It would be full planet tides, I imagine.

  • @Ph33NIXx
    @Ph33NIXx Год назад +2

    Astrum... Tank you, I am a huge avatar fan. Its nice to see some content that doesn't bash the universe.

  • @stokesseegers5012
    @stokesseegers5012 Год назад +9

    I've been becoming increasingly interested in realistic near future science fiction that doesn't break the laws of physics.

    • @Tasorius
      @Tasorius 3 месяца назад

      If our civilization survives for a thousand years, the laws of physics will be very different, because it's only a model of reality made by humans. Not the full picture of reality.

  • @marshallscot
    @marshallscot Год назад +5

    It's not really oxygen that contributes to large flora and fauna. Plants feed on carbon dioxide. High atmospheric carbon dioxide is what allows for massive plant growth, and in turn massive animals which feed on those plants.

    • @eekee6034
      @eekee6034 3 месяца назад

      Might be true, but there are limiting factors. Plants feed on CO2, but they still need to breathe oxygen. Likewise herbivores need oxygen to get the energy they need to move around, graze, and perhaps also to digest their food.

  • @moalzaben5554
    @moalzaben5554 Год назад +7

    This is why I love avatar because of all the realism it has everything from the near future technology, the flora and fauna, and Pandora itself!

  • @NicoSteentjes
    @NicoSteentjes 2 месяца назад +1

    The thing with moons is that there is no actual day and night. There is the rotation of the moon, creating day and night. And the rotation around the planet, creating a half month of day/night cycles and a half month worth of night (being in the schadow of the planet). So that life would have to cope with 25 % daytime and 75 % nighttime... Its possible I guess but seems odd.

  • @bbouabid
    @bbouabid Год назад +4

    How about gravitational effect of the nearby planet on especially Pandora's oceans and seas? In the movie, it doesn't seems notable, but in reality you can only think of how much a small moon like earth's has on our oceans and seas activities.

  • @francb1276
    @francb1276 4 месяца назад +2

    My major gripe with Avatar (which is one of my favourite movies!) is the indigenous lifeforms. On Earth, all of what could be described as the "higher" lifeforms have the same body pattern (four limbs being the most obvious trait). On Pandora, that is also almost true - all of them have a six-limb body pattern - except the Na'vi. Where exactly are their evolutionary ancestors/cousins? For me, it's the only thing that spoils an otherwise willing suspension of disbelief! Great analysis Alex, thanks for excellent content as usual.

  • @dougsinthailand7176
    @dougsinthailand7176 Год назад +7

    I’m not sure, but we may have ruled out Polyphemus sized planets in that system?

  • @Monkey_D_Luffy56
    @Monkey_D_Luffy56 Год назад +32

    If humans are advanced enough to modify genes and interstellar travel, can't they just farm raw materials from asteroids or space dust and synthesize the substance they want on Pandora?

    • @gabrielalejandrodoldan4722
      @gabrielalejandrodoldan4722 Год назад +9

      Yep

    • @davidlundquist1979
      @davidlundquist1979 Год назад +21

      That's probably why the sequel introduced a second, more impossible MacGuffin for the humans to chase after.

    • @eekee6034
      @eekee6034 3 месяца назад +3

      This is the problem with so very many sci-fi adventures: The driving conflict just makes no sense.

    • @EMan-1920
      @EMan-1920 3 месяца назад +3

      Humans just need to expand until some space elves get too rowdy and cause the galaxy to nearly collapse. That's when humanity really gets started.

  • @trapezeable
    @trapezeable Год назад +23

    I'm offended by you saying I've been living under a rock sir, because I happen to be living on top of a rock.
    I demand an apology sir! 🌍

    • @Asteroid_Bennu
      @Asteroid_Bennu Год назад +2

      I am a rock and as such I hold no grudge. Technically I live under, on top and within a rock. Space is very relative.

  • @HM-cw8im
    @HM-cw8im Год назад +2

    10:11 Because of the low gravity, would it not be that the trees are thinner and weaker? After all, there would not be much resistance for them to grow.

  • @katelee670
    @katelee670 Год назад +4

    A living planet like earth.. that would be great.. unfortunately everything is so far away you can't get to it..

  • @EnneaIsInterested
    @EnneaIsInterested Год назад +3

    The *big* problem I have with the Avatar franchise is that we don't need Unobtainium to make the global vactrain system the Resources Development Corporation runs, it's more of a construction issue.

  • @kanegamer5595
    @kanegamer5595 Год назад +12

    12:42 Not plausible either, if those mountains were filled with unobtanium, then there’s no reason they try to take down the large tree. They could’ve just mine the floating mountains

    • @aidanhammans9337
      @aidanhammans9337 3 месяца назад +1

      The logistics may be tricky. It’s a floating mountain, so the big mining equipment couldn’t be used, and they don’t know how much is necessary to float, so they’re probably worried about the terrain collapsing under them.

    • @markusgorelli5278
      @markusgorelli5278 2 месяца назад +1

      @@aidanhammans9337 Tow it out into space? Either way, one has to ask why the earth under the tree hasn't detached itself and floated off. Roots holding it down? Also, why the big mountains. Shouldn't unobtanium gravel levitate? In which case, the mountain might not be a solid mass, but bits held together by magnetic forces.

  • @toamaori
    @toamaori Год назад +5

    One thing that is ignored is the effect of xenon on sound wave frequencies.

  • @carsongbaker
    @carsongbaker Год назад +1

    Call me a chump but the first time I saw this video in my subs the thumbnail was on an Pandora creature, and I didn't think that'd be interesting. Now you've changed it to being about the planet and that peaked my interest and here I am - thanks for the change!

  • @abdulmujeeb8764
    @abdulmujeeb8764 Год назад +5

    I would love to see you Alex to make review on movie interstellar and explain gravitational waves and gorgantua

  • @alx-vla4986
    @alx-vla4986 Год назад +2

    If magnetism was strong enough to make float heavy loads, any metal tools will be strongly affected by pull/pushed (weapons, choppers ... )

  • @Hellfr4g
    @Hellfr4g Год назад +3

    interesting prospect... if the earth was tidaly locked like pandora orbiting a gas giant and the center face would be the middle east jerusalem mekka lengh degree then basically the natives of the americas would never know they orbit a gas giant and probably the japanese, nz and a couple more

  • @Lightman0359
    @Lightman0359 Год назад +117

    The dumbest part is unobtanium. Not the properties, but the name... Unobtanium? reallt Cameron was MacGuffin-ite already trademarked?

    • @whitewolf3051
      @whitewolf3051 3 месяца назад +7

      If you either watch the Birdman’s Everything Wrong With CinemaSins Avatar video or Google the word unobtanium, you would know it’s not as stupid as you think. By definition, it’s either a fictional metal that does not exist, or is a real material that’s hard to come by because of extreme rarity or really high cost.

    • @Lightman0359
      @Lightman0359 3 месяца назад +21

      @@whitewolf3051 It is calling a trope by its trope name. Like calling a MacGuffin "The MacGuffin" in dialogue. Lazy and dumb.

    • @whitewolf3051
      @whitewolf3051 3 месяца назад +2

      @@Lightman0359 Well, what else were they suppose to call an unknown rare - fictional - costly metal? Are they to make up a name? So what if they use an existing word that can be applied both in fiction and real life?

    • @Anaxemenies
      @Anaxemenies 3 месяца назад +2

      @@Lightman0359You might have a point except the naming conventions for newly discovered elements goes fairly in line with the name. We don’t get an official name until one of the scientific governing bodies meet to give it an official name and it gets recognition and acceptance.
      For example until a name was decided Nobelium was called Unnilbium. Dubnium was Unnilpentium.
      So Unobtanium while a bit on the nose does go along with that convention.

    • @samsung-eh4dv
      @samsung-eh4dv 2 месяца назад

      In their defense, transformer had transformeum.

  • @freddyjosereginomontalvo4667
    @freddyjosereginomontalvo4667 Год назад +3

    Awesome content with great topics

  • @kmoney1158
    @kmoney1158 Год назад +1

    Very cool. Hopefully I get to see hour exploration of the moon Titan in my lifetime

  • @Ali-bu6lo
    @Ali-bu6lo Год назад +6

    Unobtanium is not a metal, it's a compound as all other high-temperature superconductors are.

    • @floepiejane
      @floepiejane Год назад

      Unobtanium?! Are you fugging kidding me 🙄

    • @Ali-bu6lo
      @Ali-bu6lo Год назад +3

      @@floepiejane It's a real engineering slang for something with ideal qualities that doesn't exist. I can see it becoming a nickname for a thing like this, I don't get the backlash.

    • @vylbird8014
      @vylbird8014 4 месяца назад +4

      @@Ali-bu6lo I would just assume that in-universe it does have a scientific name that describes the chemical structure precisely, but as such names are long and cumbersome someone jokingly called it unobtainium (referencing some obscure piece of classical cinema) and the name stuck.

  • @peterloohunt
    @peterloohunt Год назад +2

    I was a bit dismayed the space travel bit at the end got cut off.
    Are you planning to do a video about the interstellar spaceflight technology in the movies? That'd be cool.

  • @SockyNoob
    @SockyNoob Год назад +10

    Never expected Avatar to hold up to scientific scrutiny.

    • @floepiejane
      @floepiejane Год назад +3

      Does it, though, or are y'all just a buncha blind stans?

  • @abloogywoogywoo
    @abloogywoogywoo Год назад +1

    Not to mention the exosolar system with its many planets would be inherently unstable as they all perturb each other, sending Polyphemus either crashing into its sun or ejected from the exosolar system.

  • @zoltannemethi8271
    @zoltannemethi8271 Год назад +10

    The problem with gas giants is their enormous gravity which attracts metaorites. It drasticaly increase the chanche of an asteroid impact on its moon. Even if there are a habitable moon around a gas giant, such impact would surely happen and will surely make the moon uninhabitable

    • @philipthecow
      @philipthecow 3 месяца назад

      Alpha Centrui is a 3 star system. Each star is way bigger than a gas giant. As a result maybe the stars absorb more asteroids instead of the gas giant.

  • @dallarian8687
    @dallarian8687 26 дней назад +1

    Ah yes, the modern youtube.
    15 minutes of video of trivia so that the 30 seconds statement video is about gets monetised.

  • @fireworkbutterfly
    @fireworkbutterfly Год назад +12

    The second movie didn’t make sense to me. Humans have apparently made earth unlivable so they’re moving to a planetoid that’s under extreme radiation, has an atmosphere with toxic gasses, and that has 16-18% CO2??? Like if they think they can terraform that how can they not terraform earth that is already pretty good or just build space cities where they can create the exact requirements for human life? They obviously have the advanced technology. Or we know it’s possible they can create alien biology through genetic manipulation, why not just engineer human bodies to better survive earth?
    First movie made more sense, they’re mining rare resources, however other planetoids in the star system should have the same resources right? We aren’t they mining them but the one that has life??? The only other known place in the universe that has life?

    • @Taronyu_SVK
      @Taronyu_SVK 9 месяцев назад

      It will make more sense later. Earth is becoming uninhabitable because biosphere is dying. You can fix that with terraforming. Pandora is the best option because you still have water and food there.

  • @RX552VBK
    @RX552VBK Год назад +1

    This video was a nice change of pace, Alex. You should do it more often.

  • @wizzardofpaws2420
    @wizzardofpaws2420 Год назад +4

    Glad you did this one! It's a beautiful movie.

  • @TitanHyperion
    @TitanHyperion Год назад +1

    Wow what an amazing video. I am still drunk af but just ate. Still so interesting to watch

  • @WKfpv
    @WKfpv Год назад +3

    Biggest problem I have with hallelujah mountains is where does all that water comes from?

    • @MightyBOBcnc
      @MightyBOBcnc Год назад

      Rain? It's a rainforest. The humidity and condensation are intense.

  • @40NDAMUl3
    @40NDAMUl3 Месяц назад +1

    Alex, huge fan been watching for years and have seen all your videos starting from a realistic representation of the solar system. Last time I commented it was asking for a new video on venus and i like to think my comment wasnt overlooked because you delivered as you always do. Im always excited when i get a notification that you or Astrum Extra posted a new video. Anyways i was wondering if youve seen the netflix show “3 Body Problem” it incorporates aliens, quantum physics, and has a great story to it based on the Wow signal. I wanted to know if you thought maybe “3 Body Problem” was more realistic than alien, avatar, interstellar, or any other movies youve covered. Thanks!

  • @nimbly1693
    @nimbly1693 Год назад +5

    A strong enough magnetic field to levitate a mountain would cause the iron in a humans blood to boil.

  • @Charles-7
    @Charles-7 Год назад +2

    if Pandora is as close to it's parent planet as Io is to Jupiter, then theirs one issue, io experiences massive tidal forces cause by Jupiter's gravitational pull, and by it's sister moons too, which causes frequent volcano eruptions and quakes on it's surface, making it impossible for complex life to survive there, so I'm afraid to say that a earth like moon orbiting so close to a gas giant, may not be possible in real life.

  • @kirandeepchakraborty7921
    @kirandeepchakraborty7921 Год назад +13

    The first Avatar movie was much more compelling in every way.

    • @davidlundquist1979
      @davidlundquist1979 Год назад +3

      Not every way. The first movie was pretty much just Dances With Wolves/ The Last Samurai in space, while the second, not so much.

  • @oneMeVz
    @oneMeVz 4 месяца назад +1

    Quaritch mentioned Pandora's low gravity. Despite the limitations of recording human and avatar actors here on Earth, I think it was intended that Pandora should be more Mars-like in mass. I heard somewhere that the low gravity was the primary explanation to the moon's megafauna. That could also explain the floating mountains and why they can fly enormous shuttles and flying fortresses in the atmosphere.

  • @no_mnom
    @no_mnom Год назад +5

    I don't know about the second movie but the first one certainly put some effort into trying to make it a bit more in the right direction than your generic scifi.
    Especially with who they had help them with designing the creatures

  • @neonshadow5005
    @neonshadow5005 Год назад +2

    Videos like this are really fun.
    This movie really just struck me as Fern Gully again. Visually amazing but a fairly standard plot under that.

    • @xenuno
      @xenuno Год назад

      Fern Gully is great and that leveling is still happening. The message has been lost though. I don't think people care anymore .. or not enough do. Witness the oceans becoming a plastic and chemical garbage dump. Hopefully, if you are correct, it might re-ignite some international cooperation on several fronts other than just CO2 which is a problem but there is some that are more serious and immediate

  • @Bambuskus505
    @Bambuskus505 Год назад +15

    I was thinking maybe the Floating Mountains might be possible if Pandora orbits just *barely* on the Roche limit. Close enough that a tiny little part of the planet is just a *liiiiiiittle* bit too close to the Gas Giant

    • @guyman1570
      @guyman1570 Год назад +7

      Then the moon should be experiencing near-constant moonquakes 😢

    • @antred11
      @antred11 Год назад +3

      ​@@guyman1570Not just that. It would be a volcanic inferno.

  • @Dr._Geno
    @Dr._Geno Год назад +1

    don't know how likely it is, but I would love to see even a surface level look at the science behind some of the various worlds in ben 10, maybe even including some of the worlds explored in the 5 years later fan project.

  • @Nemo-Nihil
    @Nemo-Nihil Год назад +5

    Space fantasy as a genre has some mystical magic to it (Ewya in Avatar's case) but the science part is usually grounding very firmly in hard science (the plausiblity of Pandora itself)

  • @edwardgabrielsantos
    @edwardgabrielsantos Месяц назад +2

    Imagined in the near future, on reality, interstellar ship had been developed with the right technology that we can truly travel through space. There, we can travel to Alpha Centauri star and see if there really is a gas giant with a hospitable moon. If it's true, we will look and then stand on the real-life moon of Pandora in Avatar