A Spacecraft Touched The Sun! Why Didn't It Melt?

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  • Опубликовано: 23 янв 2023
  • The Parker Solar Probe created history by becoming the first spacecraft to touch the Sun. It passed through the Sun’s upper atmosphere, known as the corona. Temperatures in the solar corona can soar up to a million degrees Celsius. It’s the hottest region of the solar atmosphere and is about 15 times hotter than the surface of the Sun. But the critical question is, why didn’t the Parker Solar Probe melt when it touched the Sun? No metal can withstand such high temperatures. So how did Parker manage to survive after plunging into the solar atmosphere? How is it still functioning efficiently after going through such an extreme environment?
    The answer is a combination of the physics of the solar corona and the marvelous engineering of Parker.
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Комментарии • 1,6 тыс.

  • @SnareX
    @SnareX Год назад +3042

    It's because they went at night

  • @BigKandRtv
    @BigKandRtv Год назад +745

    It's amazing what these space agencies can do for just about the cost of one F-22.

    • @GoToMan
      @GoToMan Год назад +13

      Hahaha! A good one.

    • @forfiverr3873
      @forfiverr3873 Год назад +4

      Took me sometime haha. Approved

    • @alfonsocantu9992
      @alfonsocantu9992 Год назад +5

      @@GoToMan waiting two months for President Carter to give us the go ahead and recuse the hostages in Terham, Iran...yours very truly Alfonso Cantu USMC

    • @khireddinearmin5069
      @khireddinearmin5069 Год назад +1

      Hw much is that ?

    • @wuynltrong8875
      @wuynltrong8875 Год назад +5

      Yeah, the US should just disband all their military for more space craft like this.

  • @skybot9998
    @skybot9998 Год назад +219

    Probes and satellites never cease to amaze me.👽

    • @anthonymartinez4307
      @anthonymartinez4307 Год назад +5

      Serious projects, however why do they cheat us by making junk while they have such objects, this one here actually blew my pea brain somehow I actually liked something that humanity has done correctly……

    • @cm9748
      @cm9748 Год назад

      Its like they are imaginary !

    • @longsleevethong1457
      @longsleevethong1457 Год назад +1

      All they did was tell you about it. We ain’t seen shyte yet. You’re just amazed at the sound of it.

    • @peanutyes1651
      @peanutyes1651 Год назад +1

      alien?

    • @Angry.General1461
      @Angry.General1461 Год назад +1

      @@anthonymartinez4307 It's amazing how they say the space probe touch the sun without it melting. But for some reason, they couldn't get a probe to survive on Venus for over an hour.

  • @D00mineL
    @D00mineL Год назад +296

    Moths are going to love this one

    • @MeganVictoriaKearns
      @MeganVictoriaKearns Год назад +6

      😆😆😆😆😆

    • @uzithedreadpoet6777
      @uzithedreadpoet6777 Год назад +6

      😂😂

    • @Johnny-sj9sj
      @Johnny-sj9sj Год назад +1

      The probe was completely undamaged. They launched it at night. Obvious when you think about it 🤡

    • @doodlegassum6959
      @doodlegassum6959 Год назад +7

      "Moths", they know something

    • @wawercat1516
      @wawercat1516 Год назад +6

      Maybe moths bribed nasa to launch this spacecraft, so they can go to the sun.

  • @BarbaraKeigher
    @BarbaraKeigher Год назад +118

    Thank you for also giving us the Fahrenheit temperatures! At almost 80 years old, I did not learn the Celsius way of measuring....so thank you again...so few are so kind!

    • @TheSecretsoftheUniverse
      @TheSecretsoftheUniverse  Год назад +22

      You’re welcome! ❤️

    • @sjoerdhartman9181
      @sjoerdhartman9181 Год назад +12

      Ya had 80 years if you had wanted to.. guess ya didn't. 🤷🏼‍♂️
      Don't think ya missed anything without it anyway.. 🙋🏼‍♂️

    • @lifeisnotdaijoubu_
      @lifeisnotdaijoubu_ Год назад

      dumb people use fahrenheit , yeah classic american

    • @sjoerdhartman9181
      @sjoerdhartman9181 Год назад +2

      @@lifeisnotdaijoubu_
      😂
      That's not a very scientific remark matey!!
      🤣

    • @BarbaraKeigher
      @BarbaraKeigher Год назад +2

      @@lifeisnotdaijoubu_ Thank you for your kind compassion to a dumb person.

  • @TheOuterDrive
    @TheOuterDrive Год назад +36

    Me :" You should never look at the sun!! "
    Parker: " Hold my Beer"...

    • @bp6837
      @bp6837 Год назад +4

      You mean there's beer in the solar probe? Wtf..

    • @ravirajsingh3175
      @ravirajsingh3175 Год назад +2

      More like "hold my carbon shield"

    • @jeremydyar7566
      @jeremydyar7566 Год назад +3

      Hold my Gallon of water

    • @magnolia8626
      @magnolia8626 Год назад +2

      Joke's getting old.

    • @TheOuterDrive
      @TheOuterDrive Год назад +1

      @@magnolia8626 not as old as trolls with no real problems...

  • @ninohanselakol4769
    @ninohanselakol4769 Год назад +23

    The most amazing part of this video was the camera who took a video to that spacecraft. It also not melted

    • @waleedahmaat1652
      @waleedahmaat1652 Год назад +1

      Xaxaxa! Great point! 😂

    • @Lucia-sy7le
      @Lucia-sy7le Год назад

      It's a Polaroid. Kodak was way ahead of its time😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂📸

  • @coralie9469
    @coralie9469 Год назад +51

    This is pretty nifty and what Parker can do, gotta love the Sun and what she can do!! Great video again, SOU, thanks!!

    • @TheSecretsoftheUniverse
      @TheSecretsoftheUniverse  Год назад +5

      Glad you enjoyed it!

    • @coralie9469
      @coralie9469 Год назад +3

      @@TheSecretsoftheUniverse Yes, always!! It's a shame you get the crackpot comments in here and a shame they don't waste their time elsewhere!! Thanks for what you do!! 😊

    • @elvinv1110
      @elvinv1110 Год назад +1

      Sun is female? 😰😰😰😰

    • @paulssnfuture2752
      @paulssnfuture2752 Год назад +1

      @@elvinv1110 no, its just that to refer to nonliving creatures "she" is being used until this PC culture popped up

  • @elliec2943
    @elliec2943 Год назад +94

    When I would see those ships on Star Trek get too close to a star, I would have no understanding as to how it was even possible for them to do it without melting, but if we already have the technology to pull it off NOW in the 2020's, it doesn't seem at all impossible anymore...

    • @Doomdougie
      @Doomdougie Год назад +6

      Well they had force shields that’s what protected the star ships and plus they probably had other alien technology helping to

    • @sandram.d.6164
      @sandram.d.6164 Год назад +3

      That's what's called special effects BECAUSE IT ISN'T REAL.

    • @MissesWitch
      @MissesWitch Год назад

      yes I sawwwww! but I knew they would have very special materials for their ships, not to mention shields!

    • @unkindled6410
      @unkindled6410 Год назад +1

      thing is, like the video mentioned, theres a diference between heat and temperature. just like the probe, by avoiding the denser parts of the corona you wont have to experience the actual atomizing levels of temperature created by the solar winds, and you van approach the stars surface way more, which on a cosmic scale is not THAT hot, as mentiones its less then 6k celsius, which albeit its enough to vaporize any metal we know (in earthern atmosphere but lets not dive too deep into that part because it complicates a lot) its magnetudes colder than the dense parts of the corona and specially the stars core which is where most of its heats conxentrated anyway. its even colder than the earths core.

    • @Lucia-sy7le
      @Lucia-sy7le Год назад +1

      Elle, with Captain Kirk at the helm, the universe is our oyster. Live long and prosper 🤣❤️🤣❤️🤣❤️🤣❤️

  • @MyDreamLife
    @MyDreamLife Год назад +74

    It would have been easier for the probe if they had landed at night.

    • @Darrellychs
      @Darrellychs Год назад +3

      Too funny

    • @waynejackson1426
      @waynejackson1426 Год назад +2

      I agree, so they should have landed on the other side.

    • @user-kz4gf1wp2d
      @user-kz4gf1wp2d Год назад +1

      Or at least call on the fire bragade prior to getting so close.

    • @bp6837
      @bp6837 Год назад +1

      Wait..... so you mean....

    • @markfox1545
      @markfox1545 Год назад

      @@waynejackson1426 - you think it landed? Ok...

  • @Entity_BlackRed777
    @Entity_BlackRed777 Год назад +8

    Parker Solar Probe!! I remember even since 2016 when it took off!! Now it finally touched the sun after 7 years, AWESOME!!

  • @and5336
    @and5336 Год назад +42

    Even the sun couldn't stop the Corona :(

    • @MarcBossYT
      @MarcBossYT Год назад +3

      LMAO

    • @VVS30187
      @VVS30187 Год назад +1

      It did stopped in Africa but not in the western world

  • @SomeInspirationPublications
    @SomeInspirationPublications Год назад +30

    Brilliant explanation! Thank you. Keep it up Parker!

    • @DonLyfe
      @DonLyfe Год назад +1

      🤣🤣🤣

  • @georgejones5019
    @georgejones5019 Год назад +16

    I imagine it's something similar to Leindenfrost Effect. The cold of void of space freezes a portion of the outer part of the craft, and it comes into contact with the extreme heat of the sun.

    • @mousasaab2652
      @mousasaab2652 Год назад +1

      There’s no pressure in space, this is just thermodynamics at play

  • @user-ds8ve2ph2s
    @user-ds8ve2ph2s Год назад +88

    But why do people say "it touched the sun" if it's still at 4 million miles away?

    • @icczy11
      @icczy11 Год назад +43

      Makes for a better title to attract clicks. But considering Corona is also part of the sun, one could say it's a fair way of putting it.

    • @scottarivett496
      @scottarivett496 Год назад +10

      @@icczy11
      One could also say it’s not. 4 million miles is a pretty good stretch on any scale.

    • @icczy11
      @icczy11 Год назад +24

      @@scottarivett496 the point is that it's still a layer of the sun

    • @oskidocolor3065
      @oskidocolor3065 Год назад +6

      Exactly! Lies foe sake of science

    • @GoToMan
      @GoToMan Год назад +21

      @@scottarivett496 It’s not a rock, it’s gaseous and corona is its upper atmosphere.

  • @williampapadopoulos8145
    @williampapadopoulos8145 Год назад +161

    If it flew REALLY REALLY fast through the corona it wouldn’t get burned because it’s kind of like passing your finger through the flame of a match or a candle. If the flame doesn’t have the time to actually heat it up to a temperature that would burn you, you can pass your finger through multiple times without even feeling the heat, let alone getting burned!

    • @vimalvestron8684
      @vimalvestron8684 Год назад +3

      is it really true or just made that up ?

    • @punithaiu
      @punithaiu Год назад +35

      @@vimalvestron8684 light a candle, pass your finger through the flame fast. Similar concept. But the spacecraft got to be going really fast cz the solar flares are so frikkin huge. Hundreds of thousands of kilometres huge. So it's impossible to go through that fast..

    • @jabr0nidave262
      @jabr0nidave262 Год назад +38

      I like the theory but I think it has to fly at much higher speed than that, almost as fast as a finger passing by the whole length of a flame in less than a second, the probe wasn't that fast it stayed in sun's diameter for far too long to relate to your theory

    • @chriswilliams868
      @chriswilliams868 Год назад +16

      I don’t think you understand how fast that is the probe would have to clear the sun in under a second lol

    • @DonLyfe
      @DonLyfe Год назад +11

      You have one heck of an imagination

  • @ceciliogarcia9569
    @ceciliogarcia9569 Год назад +16

    When you have spent most of your life, living in a little cottage in the woods, you will always be amazed at what man can do.

  • @thesnare100
    @thesnare100 Год назад +67

    I always thought temperature was a measure of heat, but I have heard that what you feel when you put your hand in a heated oven (not against one of the sides or the grills to hold food) is called heat flux

    • @TheCarpenterUnion
      @TheCarpenterUnion Год назад +5

      Just like the video, you stated a lot while saying nothing

    • @Ruzzky_Bly4t
      @Ruzzky_Bly4t Год назад +11

      @@TheCarpenterUnion The video was pretty clear. Even though the temperature is 1 million degrees, the heat is much lower due to the low particle density. And to protect itself from the heat, it uses a heat shield out of a carbon composite, wires made out of niobium, and a water cooling system for its solar panels. The comment is unclear if you don't know what heat flux is, but it takes around 15 seconds to find out.

    • @Ruzzky_Bly4t
      @Ruzzky_Bly4t Год назад +3

      Well, heat flux would be the reason why the temperature is much greater than the heat, right? The area around the sun has a low particle density, hence low heat flux, so lower heat.

    • @brandonrobertson6327
      @brandonrobertson6327 Год назад

      @@Ruzzky_Bly4t Like heat in the desert compared to a jungle. It's a dry heat.🙄

    • @wbbartlett
      @wbbartlett Год назад

      @@TheCarpenterUnion Your comment adds some quality insight to the debate. Congrats

  • @gopichalapathi1223
    @gopichalapathi1223 Год назад +13

    When we learn that line " if we cant do it for real, then orchestrate it "

  • @tomatomoussin9134
    @tomatomoussin9134 Год назад +14

    What amazes me is that the solar probe being so close to the sun doesn’t get affected at all by the IMP waves burst during sun flare’s, especially trough the magnetic field.

    • @DonLyfe
      @DonLyfe Год назад

      Because it’s fake… It’s not real… it is physically impossible to ever get anything that close to Sol and maintain any type of molecular structure. It’s BS.

  • @danser_theplayer01
    @danser_theplayer01 Год назад +6

    Well I could explain the corona being hotter than the sun by a lighter example. When you light a lighter the bottom part of the flame is colder than the space above that flame, all heat will eventually end up at the very top but the gas needs a "runway" to burn, so the most heated part will be the one where all gas has been burned.

  • @DiomedesDominguez
    @DiomedesDominguez Год назад +14

    At 1:10 there is a jump and felt so unnatural that I needed to go back 5 times.

    • @babarhassan99
      @babarhassan99 Год назад +2

      Why did you do this to us?

    • @PatrickCCarter
      @PatrickCCarter Год назад +1

      So mad I saw you comment before getting to that point….. my mind immediately cringed 😬

    • @DiomedesDominguez
      @DiomedesDominguez Год назад

      @@PatrickCCarter sorry pal

  • @Wraith-Knight
    @Wraith-Knight Год назад +1

    i always wandered about the parker probe thx

  • @mark11967AD
    @mark11967AD Год назад +1

    It’s amazing what people can create like this probe. Ingenious. I’m fascinated by the visual spectacle and physical processes of the sun. It’s beautiful and mesmerizing to watch. Stars created all the elements and essentially all life as well.

    • @geneandaj4286
      @geneandaj4286 3 месяца назад

      You believe this? You voted for Biden didn't you... This is as fake as a tran e... Use common sense

  • @remorajkumar4101
    @remorajkumar4101 Год назад +11

    This is really one of the tremendous creation of humans.

    • @Lucia-sy7le
      @Lucia-sy7le Год назад

      Actually more important for us to study our heat source than anything else. We really need to heed Dorothy's advice, "There's no place like home." 🌈 (From the movie Wizard of Oz, 1939, featuring Judy Garland who sings Somewhere Over the Rainbow oh so beautifully I might add.)

  • @Freeman361
    @Freeman361 Год назад +20

    Why didnt the probe melt? They figured they could just operate it only at nightimes.

    • @joelfariolen1131
      @joelfariolen1131 Год назад

      What a joke.

    • @alanjm1234
      @alanjm1234 Год назад

      Cloudy days too.

    • @seanbritish
      @seanbritish Месяц назад

      No because there is zero atmosphere so it will always be cool in the shade.

  • @eric7782
    @eric7782 Год назад

    This is fascinating. Especially the Corona aspect.

  • @md.moinulislam9467
    @md.moinulislam9467 Год назад +1

    Very good technology video review....!

  • @VELVETPERSON
    @VELVETPERSON Год назад +3

    This is amazing. Can't wait to walk on sun surface

  • @bigpicture3
    @bigpicture3 Год назад +3

    The analogy that you use it similar to "volts" and "amps". The high voltage that Tesla used (and even with static electricity) that has extremely low amperage passing through a body is relatively harmless. But high amperage passing through a body will absolutely fry it. Of course it takes the voltage to get the amperage, but it does not take the amperage to get the voltage. Temperature and "heat" (volume) are somewhat similar to this.

    • @vishaljgosalia
      @vishaljgosalia Год назад +2

      I have never truly understood voltage and amperage.

  • @barashah1171
    @barashah1171 Год назад

    very well made and informative video.

  • @ramshakthi7924
    @ramshakthi7924 Год назад +1

    Great explanation 👌

  • @user-kz4gf1wp2d
    @user-kz4gf1wp2d Год назад +4

    It would have made the approach more successful had they called on the fire bragade prior to getting so close.

  • @roberttelarket4934
    @roberttelarket4934 Год назад +5

    Absolutely miraculous/incredible scientific apparatus - arguably the greatest!!!!!!

    • @geneandaj4286
      @geneandaj4286 3 месяца назад

      lol People will belive anything

  • @Macam2macam
    @Macam2macam Год назад +2

    simply amazing. can t wait for all the secrets that parker would reveal.

  • @stevehermann892
    @stevehermann892 Год назад +2

    Now that is rocket science!

  • @PlayButtonGuy
    @PlayButtonGuy Год назад +3

    If they find something new and complex, there you go, another extra chapter into our physics textbook 🗿.

  • @robbylebotha
    @robbylebotha Год назад +5

    Dunno but I think you chose a very complicated way to say that hot air won't burn you compared to hot water. Then maybe go further and say the reason for this is that the particles of air are less dense than particles that make up water, so they may be the same temperature but the lack of density means the heat is not transfered efficiently enough to burn.
    If I understood you correctly as a layman

  • @Left_Joy-Con
    @Left_Joy-Con Год назад +2

    Props to the cameraman for going to the Sun too.

  • @aprilthomas1489
    @aprilthomas1489 Год назад

    Riiiiight, I'm going to go ahead and ask you to remember to use the new coversheets on your TPS reports from now on.

  • @R_shah
    @R_shah Год назад +8

    Solar energy absorbed by that solar probe is at its peak

    • @guillaumemichallat307
      @guillaumemichallat307 Год назад +1

      Ahhah. It makes me thinking of WALL-E charging scene when he Is in space 🤣 2 seconds and OK

  • @6rays660
    @6rays660 Год назад +5

    RIP to people who believe this is true.

    • @geneandaj4286
      @geneandaj4286 3 месяца назад

      Thank you...But so amazing is they really do believe this lie

  • @malayswain
    @malayswain Год назад

    And the info we are seeing for free.. kudos to RUclips..

  • @Interlooper_G
    @Interlooper_G Год назад

    This is awesome.... ❤️

  • @galimir
    @galimir Год назад +4

    well,how do they actually know whats the temperature of the Sun?Has anyone been ever there to measure it?

  • @paschalmk313
    @paschalmk313 Год назад +4

    "I allow manipulation to find out where my enemy wants me to go, then I use my mind to break the trap and punish the perpetrators." -Emory Tate II

  • @RohitKulshreshtha
    @RohitKulshreshtha Год назад +1

    I’m gonna have to see those TPS reports.

  • @stanlee5766
    @stanlee5766 Год назад +5

    It must of been cloudy that day🙄

    • @m4rvinmartian
      @m4rvinmartian Год назад +1

      There is no such phrase as "must of" in the English language. The "education/indoctrination" system has failed you.
      Just do the simple test...
      'of been cloudy'
      'have been cloudy'
      It's "must have". What happened was, your teachers were lazy and never connected for you, must've spelled out, with it sounded out, so you hear "must of".
      But must've is what is called a "contraction", it is a shortening of must have, must've.
      There also is no should of, would of, could of. It's all should have, would have, and could have.
      Should've, would've, could've learned, if you had a real teacher.

  • @BlueBeaches123
    @BlueBeaches123 Год назад +3

    'finally, a worthy opponent!' - nokia 3310

  • @melikebalikci8069
    @melikebalikci8069 Год назад

    what a heat shield and dynamics harmony .

  • @mohamedyoussef8835
    @mohamedyoussef8835 Год назад

    Awesome video & awesome information ++++++++++++++++++++++ 🙂

  • @PoolsaLeestreak
    @PoolsaLeestreak Год назад +4

    it didn't melt because it touched the sun at night

  • @josephmungai1799
    @josephmungai1799 Год назад +4

    The Corona has but one way to handle, a mask and social distancing.....the spacecraft had a really good mask.

  • @2apocalypsex
    @2apocalypsex Год назад +1

    just got done reading some of the comments here and now it's got me thinking did the people making the comments actually watch the video before commenting? The video clearly explains why the sattilite did not burn up.

  • @darkzero4608
    @darkzero4608 Год назад

    Good to know things. Well god bless you do more on this.

  • @Pathogenai
    @Pathogenai Год назад +7

    Let's all fly into the Sun!

    • @ibnewton8951
      @ibnewton8951 Год назад +5

      Just remember to do it safely and go at night.

    • @pauliedi6573
      @pauliedi6573 Год назад

      But go at night when it is cool

    • @spartanalphamode2987
      @spartanalphamode2987 Год назад

      @@pauliedi6573 guys don’t forget your sunscreen you’ll need it. 😂

    • @chuckredd9131
      @chuckredd9131 Год назад +1

      Frank Sinatra says... "Fly me To The Moon"

  • @megalexantros
    @megalexantros Год назад +6

    I wanna know if it's gonna escape orbit afterwards, or if it's plunging to its death.

  • @narpatsinghrawat1614
    @narpatsinghrawat1614 Год назад

    Nice information 👌👌🙂

  • @roberttelarket4934
    @roberttelarket4934 Год назад

    I love the expression touch the sun!!!

  • @NinjutsuSeeker
    @NinjutsuSeeker Год назад +5

    I don't need to watch this video to know that they didn't melt because they have a camera. The camera never dies

    • @waynejackson1426
      @waynejackson1426 Год назад

      You can't use common sense in science. I'll give you 2 scenarios. (1) does light need a medium to travel? Sounds does so light should, right? (2) Before the invention of the internal combustion engine there were some sceptics who thought that there was no way around cooling the engine before it melted itself. What's were the alternatives?

  • @VictorBrunko
    @VictorBrunko Год назад +15

    They flew at night time, that's how! ✈️

  • @ICYMIINMIY
    @ICYMIINMIY Год назад +1

    “Hey Peter, did you get that TPS report?”

  • @jrag1000
    @jrag1000 Год назад

    Excellent

  • @johnrhodes9964
    @johnrhodes9964 Год назад +12

    So that's where the corona virus came from !

    • @raulahti
      @raulahti Год назад +4

      Well... _everything_ came from sun(s) so ... in some level, you're right.

  • @angelruizvillot2665
    @angelruizvillot2665 Год назад +3

    Is unbelievable how this cameramen is so close to the sun.

  • @tahirusani8738
    @tahirusani8738 6 месяцев назад

    Very interesting and a very good work❤❤
    I think temperatures at closer to the sun is lower.

  • @reueljacques
    @reueljacques Год назад

    Incredible 😳!!!

  • @glenlongstreet7
    @glenlongstreet7 Год назад +3

    It went at night ;)

  • @Leo-pd4fc
    @Leo-pd4fc Год назад +5

    It's impossible and amazing to think Voyager touched The sun and didin't melt, that's awesome our technology IS great, Corona sound very familiar since 2019. Btw IS IT Late to watching comet c2022 e3? 🌌

    • @nagualdesign
      @nagualdesign Год назад +3

      Neither Voyager probe approached the Sun. They left Earth orbit on a heading to Jupiter. This video is about the Parker Solar Probe.

    • @nagualdesign
      @nagualdesign Год назад +1

      C/2022 E3 should be visible at by the end of the month/early February during the new moon, when the sky is at its darkest (clouds permitting).

    • @Andrew_the_Astrophile
      @Andrew_the_Astrophile Год назад +1

      @@nagualdesign isn't it already visible. If you use a pair of binoculars?

    • @nagualdesign
      @nagualdesign Год назад

      @@Andrew_the_Astrophile Possibly. I was thinking about naked eye visibility. It's been visible through a telescope for a while, depending on how powerful your telescope is.

    • @Andrew_the_Astrophile
      @Andrew_the_Astrophile Год назад

      @@nagualdesign I'm probably going to try to see it with binoculars, because I have good experience with them when observing Andromeda galaxy.

  • @davidmahoney3804
    @davidmahoney3804 Год назад

    So that's why dry heat is more tolerable than humid heat. Particle density. Cool.

  • @bwest6275
    @bwest6275 Год назад

    The engineering behind this is gangsta AF 👌

    • @F59x
      @F59x Год назад

      Sunblock truly does work miracles

  • @mikaeeldolie6215
    @mikaeeldolie6215 Год назад +9

    I'm sure it did it at night. Obviously it survived. LOL

  • @mummra7
    @mummra7 Год назад +4

    the CDC would still insist that probe be vaccinated upon return for having had contact with the corona.

    • @chetanshah3891
      @chetanshah3891 Год назад

      Yes but there are so many makers... Which one would you suggest?? 😂😂😂

  • @vonabod4259
    @vonabod4259 Год назад

    Impressive!

  • @tsgw7369
    @tsgw7369 8 месяцев назад

    Wow clever. Niobium have not heard of that b4

  • @costrio
    @costrio Год назад +11

    One can pass a finger through a candle flame with no problem. Heat can be directed/controlled. I know every time I open my refrigerator door and feel the cool air. New materials are being developed all the time. Basic sciences applied to higher tech every day, it seems.
    Cool, ain't itf? (pun intended)

    • @heartofthunder1440
      @heartofthunder1440 Год назад +2

      And not to mention that the solar system is more quantum than you think too. If you went as far as thinking of the solar system operating similar to a atom, it’s more plausible. But, with atoms anything is possible, atoms make up everything you see, up to and including yourself.

    • @GameJunky513
      @GameJunky513 Год назад +2

      Terrible comparison really. Passing your finger over a candle sure. Now hold your finger over top of it. Guess what it's burns you. This thing isn't measly passing by the sun it headed straight for it. Even after the videos explanation it seems so far fetched. But I guess it was still 4 million miles away so it really didn't touch the sun either.

    • @costrio
      @costrio Год назад +1

      @@GameJunky513 Outside the box, it is a good example how heat can be controlled. It takes time for the energy to travel from the outside to the inside. Control the rate of heat flow and you increase the amount of time exposure can be endured. Calculate the numbers and the principle is the same -- heat transfer rate, IMO.

  • @gerryquinn5224
    @gerryquinn5224 Год назад +5

    The reason it was able to do this is simple... it went at night when the sun is much cooler. 🤣🤣🤣

  • @hathor1985
    @hathor1985 Год назад +1

    Putting your hand in a heated oven ( 400° C ) or boiling water 95°-100° causes severe burn wounds

  • @krish_4872
    @krish_4872 Год назад +1

    1:11 Why did yall cut out a portion of the video?

  • @aguy446
    @aguy446 Год назад +3

    The crap you guys are willing to believe holy cow

    • @ivanrobb3900
      @ivanrobb3900 Год назад +2

      Why didn't it melt? Isn't the surrounding atmosphere hot as well? If it's traveling sideways it's still exposed to heat isn't it? If it's 33 degrees outside, it's still 33 degrees to my left as well.

    • @powers1776reset
      @powers1776reset Год назад

      @@ivanrobb3900 well for starters, there has only been a cartoon probe. Where is the real proof of any such nonsense?

    • @ivanrobb3900
      @ivanrobb3900 Год назад

      @@powers1776reset lol, glass ceilings anyone?

  • @NCC_NO-COMMENT-CHANNEL
    @NCC_NO-COMMENT-CHANNEL Год назад +5

    So it has not been destroyed by sun's gravity? Is it because of light and rays pushing Parker to maintain its orbit and position?

    • @belisarian6429
      @belisarian6429 Год назад +8

      Because it was:
      A) far from it so gravity effects were relatively weak (4 million miles is close as far as getting close to the Sun, but far as to feel full force of its gravity)
      B) It didnt go straight into the Sun, it was on elliptic orbit so it didnt feel much of gravity effects at all (if you are in orbit it means you are basically in freefall, so not feeling pull of gravity at all, you need to stop or slow down to feel gravity).

    • @zan1971
      @zan1971 Год назад +2

      Gravity is not a force and it doesn't act on something. You fall back onto the ground after jumping up because the Earth is in constant motion. When you jump, you are in free fall, but then the Earth accelerates right into you which is what you understand as "falling down".
      People on the other side of the Earth don't fall off the sphere because of the centrifugal force generated by the rotation of the Earth which keeps you grounded.
      Objects like space crafts are attracted to other planets or larger structures because of curvatures in space time. In simple words, their path is literally warped by the structures (like planets and stars) to follow that specific path. Hence they cannot go straight. Because they are being thrown on a different path entirely.
      So what does this mean? Basically you should know that your understanding of gravity being a "crushing force" is incorrect. It is not a force at all and it does not act upon objects. Space time is simply being distorted. So it does not produce any crushing force. It's like changing railway tracks to make the train move in a different direction.
      The proof is that we have never been able to observe or measure gravity as a force acting on any object nor are there any particles that exist which are causing such force.

    • @raoulduke7668
      @raoulduke7668 Год назад

      @@zan1971 You can't be serious.

    • @zan1971
      @zan1971 Год назад

      @@raoulduke7668
      I am. Gravity is a Newtonian concept. What I explained is how Einstein saw the world. And it is pretty accurate.

    • @TheMrFlauschig
      @TheMrFlauschig Год назад

      ​@@zan1971 You are right for the second half but the first falling part is complete bullshit. You are falling down for the same reason: gravity.

  • @hungryowl1559
    @hungryowl1559 Год назад +1

    Thats awesome

  • @davidhuffman4036
    @davidhuffman4036 Год назад

    The magnifying effect ,like sun through a magnifying glass. Heat is more condensed and localized through the glass, even though the same light shining on us is the same light coming through the other side of the glass

  • @astutik8909
    @astutik8909 Год назад +4

    Why didnt it melt???
    Because it never happened.

  • @nahomalphageek2516
    @nahomalphageek2516 Год назад +5

    Touched the Sun but 6,000,000 KMs away? 😀

    • @beyondme9369
      @beyondme9369 Год назад

      From the sun's surface..but if corona is considered a part of the sun..then Parker has touched it..

    • @nahomalphageek2516
      @nahomalphageek2516 Год назад

      @@beyondme9369 just for comparision , it's 15X the distance between earth & moon

    • @beyondme9369
      @beyondme9369 Год назад

      @@nahomalphageek2516 I understand..but i was saying that..corona is sun's outer atmosphere extending upto 8.6 million miles..so yeah..if sun's atmosphere is considered a part of sun..then the probe touched it..entered it..and went very close to the surface..

    • @nahomalphageek2516
      @nahomalphageek2516 Год назад

      ​@@beyondme9369 got it, but can't imagine how thin the atmosphere at that distance will be.
      Just to give you an idea, earth's atmosphere only stretches upto 10,000 KMs, beyond that it will be quite a stretch* to call it an atmosphere (so thin)

    • @beyondme9369
      @beyondme9369 Год назад +1

      @@nahomalphageek2516 yeah but you cannot really compare earth to sun..when more than a million earth can fit into the sun..sun also weighs more than 300000 times that of earth..so..not really comparable right?

  • @gustaftheone9279
    @gustaftheone9279 Год назад

    Fascinating 😊

  • @richardmercer2337
    @richardmercer2337 Год назад +2

    This general idea was the subject of an episode of "Star Trek: The Next Generation": "Suspicions" (1993).

  • @officialtigervoice
    @officialtigervoice Год назад +3

    The Sun is a conscious deity and perhaps chose not to burn it up lol

    • @OmenAkumaru20223
      @OmenAkumaru20223 Год назад

      The sun is the star created by YHWH to light & warm the planet He put humanity on.

    • @strezko
      @strezko Год назад

      @@OmenAkumaru20223 quite an interesting claim, any evidence that this Yehova guy you are talking about actually exists?

    • @xx_amongus_xx6987
      @xx_amongus_xx6987 Год назад

      @@strezko Science bless your soul

    • @strezko
      @strezko Год назад

      @@xx_amongus_xx6987 interesting thing you are mentioning, any evidence that this soul you are talking about actually exists?

    • @xx_amongus_xx6987
      @xx_amongus_xx6987 Год назад

      @@strezko Is there any evidence that you have intelligence or have social skills? I'll help you with that one, the answer is no.
      But to answer your question, yes, the word "soul" exists, it is defined as;
      soul
      [sōl]
      NOUN
      the spiritual or immaterial part of a human being or animal, regarded as immortal.

  • @miklfog9675
    @miklfog9675 Год назад +4

    HAHAHAHA it never happened is why it didn't melt lmao

  • @soap2139
    @soap2139 Год назад

    You have a very good imagination.

  • @bungboris
    @bungboris Год назад

    Maybe because it didn't forget to bring an umbrella with it.. 😏👍

  • @TheDodge1011
    @TheDodge1011 Год назад +3

    Funny how, heat and fire brought down the WTC but cannot burn this crate 🤔😆😆

    • @Blenduu
      @Blenduu Год назад

      Exactly 💯. 🐑

    • @Sofakingdom420
      @Sofakingdom420 Год назад +2

      Did you watch the video?

    • @TheDodge1011
      @TheDodge1011 Год назад +2

      Yes, I did. Twice.
      I'm afraid that the new science of Scientism doesn't convince me at all.
      Speculative Scientism.
      CGI doesn't grab me, either.

    • @Blenduu
      @Blenduu Год назад

      @@TheDodge1011 I appreciate the photographer that survived, too. I like NASA's CGI alot better.

    • @strezko
      @strezko Год назад

      @@TheDodge1011 it’s kinda hilarious that you guys don’t understand heat transfer.

  • @DarkBlade6690
    @DarkBlade6690 Год назад +6

    Yeah.... I'm calling bs

    • @TheSecretsoftheUniverse
      @TheSecretsoftheUniverse  Год назад +12

      Try physics sometime! Things will start making sense

    • @dragongeraldb
      @dragongeraldb Год назад +2

      No, he is using his speech spell, just call shenanigans and we can all go over with are brooms and get him.

    • @dataexpunged6969
      @dataexpunged6969 Год назад +3

      @@TheSecretsoftheUniverse This burn was needed 😂

    • @Blenduu
      @Blenduu Год назад +3

      I tried calling 📞 too. But my battery 🔋 is too low. So, I'm texting BS.

    • @DarkBlade6690
      @DarkBlade6690 Год назад +2

      @@Blenduu love it lol gotta call bs one way or another even if you have to send it via Morse code

  • @AvaLeafs10
    @AvaLeafs10 Год назад +1

    I’m gunna need those tps reports…

  • @abhinandankaranth8597
    @abhinandankaranth8597 Год назад +2

    The Engineering is out of the space.....💯💯🥶

  • @craigjones2836
    @craigjones2836 Год назад +5

    Because it never happened

    • @Austin_Playz27
      @Austin_Playz27 14 дней назад +2

      “waaa i don’t understand any science so i don’t like how these people are smarter than me so im gonna simply say their wrong which makes me smarter than them waaaaaah”

  • @SanoopAI
    @SanoopAI Год назад

    What data will it send , temperature data based on the depth?

  • @supersasquatch
    @supersasquatch Год назад +1

    Yeah my hand's skin definitely burns more in boiling water then in the hot oven, i confirm it

  • @timewalker6654
    @timewalker6654 Год назад +2

    amazing feat of science and engineering.

    • @Vellisaden0207
      @Vellisaden0207 Год назад

      You believe this crap ???? Indoctrination

    • @geneandaj4286
      @geneandaj4286 3 месяца назад

      You really believe this? Lol

  • @se7en857
    @se7en857 Год назад +2

    Wow that is so amazing that we can send a probe into the sun atmosphere without it melting or burning 🔥 we are close to becoming a type 1 civilization

    • @m4rvinmartian
      @m4rvinmartian Год назад

      HAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHA!!!