Enjoy the timelapses? After making the first few, I had to keep making more! I found them breathtaking, it feels like you are there when you can appreicate depth and perspective from the movement of the sequence. Also I'm curious to know your thoughts about the CGI sticker in the corner during the CGI sequences? I wanted to create a easy way for the viewer to know if something is CGI or not, if the sticker is not there then you know you are looking at a real images. In the past I have just had a subtle "Illustration" text in the top corner but I guess too many viewers missed that. Thanks for all your support!
The ,,CGI" corner is helpful, you might consider another abbreviation for real images (RI for real images, RIT for real image timelapse or something like that) Thank you for all your work, videos, your curiosity and everything else :) I've got the feeling that your narrating voice improves, it sounds more secure/firm
I agree with your closing statement that "Space exploration is getting exciting!". As a 62 year old, it all began shortly after I was born, so to see how far we've come in those years is especially amazing to me. I've always been an avid reader of science fiction, even as a very young person. It seems that much of that old fiction is becoming science fact!
Thanks for covering this, my university was apart of this project and I actually sat on a couple of meetings in a room named after Rosetta. I read about the project and was really fascinated, and it gets even better when you release a video about it.
This is such a high quality upload. You have put together and narrated some of the most amazing space images I have ever seen. I remember seeing the low resolution images of this comet when the mission was in the news. For you to put together and show the later higher resolution pictures and time lapse is fantastic in conjunction with your commentary. I can tell you put a lot of work into this and I really appreciate it. A gem of a video in a sea of shite that is RUclips. Thank you.
I couldn't say better, obviously a lot of work has been put into this. Highly appreciated content. Great quality, stunning pictures, very captivating narration! Don't stop making these awesome video!
Dont overly agree. Superb video, yes. But there is also a lot of other excellent material on RUclips. However for some reason, I find such relatively easy to find.
Isn't it extremely sad that these kinds of missions aren't front and center with all news outlets around the world? Instead we get to hear from lying politicians, about every horrible crime in our city and the terrible things happening around the world. This nearly brought me to tears in a few places when I'd try to comprehend what I'm actually looking at. HUMANS LANDED A CRAFT ON A FUCKING COMET - that is absolutely amazing and shouldn't be brushed off like it is.
This is possibly your most magnificent episode yet! I've said before that your videos seems to contain content that I've never seen anywhere else, but this one is extraordinary - definitely one to download and view multiple times with the pause button.
I remember when I subscribed back when you only had a few thousand subscribers! I remember saying . . . "These are really well made! I see a lot of potential for this channel in the near future!" Wow! It sure has! These really are awesome! Thank you so much for these videos! I'm proud of you! Great job!
Subscribing to your channel a few months back was one of the best decisions. Your videos are very informative and you have good visuals as well. Keep it up.
I only found your channel tonight and I’ve been up watching your videos, they’re so amazing and I can’t stop watching your videos, please never stop what you love to do
If you are going to love this stuff , it's better to know the truth about 67p. Google the hip bone of a human and come back and look at 67p. All asteroids are the biological identities of gigantic creatures. As told in biblical accounts , there was a huge war in heaven and destroyed many . Allbthe organic compounds mentioned in this video that's ssid to be on the commet are in your body's composition because it was once a living creature thatbwas destroyed by this great war. We are being lied to about the big history of this world and beyond. If a part of these body patrs ever makes it to earth , DNA test will prove it was human mitochondrial DNA in a living stated.
Here’s a fun question for you... both the comet/asteroid missions have found precursors to life. What does that really mean? Is there really life everywhere it can flourish? Were these comets or asteroids from a planet that had life before us in our solar system (that was subsequently destroyed in a cataclysm)?
Lotta new info here. A few years ago i thought about moving there. But after this video explaining those stress fractures at the 2 lobes junction, I'm rethinking my plans.
I remember when this mission got to the comet and sent back all sorts of fascinating information about it. And it was less than a year before New Horizons got to Pluto and sent back all of the photos and data from there. We need some more missions like this, either from NASA or the ESA.
If people only realized how much they miss when paying attention to looking down instead of looking up....Hard to talk about it in a conversation cause you just get "that look" The video is excellent!
Alex, your mention of previously unknown cometary organic compounds evoked a memory of Fred Hoyle’s book The Intelligent Universe, where the author postulates the idea of cosmic panspermia. While I won’t debate any actual of perceived merits or faults of his hypothesis, it is interesting to note that many of his theories are now woven into the discussion of the impact (no pun intended) that comets may have played in the origin of life on Earth, and by inference, anywhere. Your presentations are alway “must watch”! Thank you!
“Space exploration is getting exciting.” Thanks to channels like this one. I didn’t foresee this when I started watching RUclips. I’m not a physicist or scientist. I love space videos. Thank you
Space is such an interesting place. I found out about this comet from my book. I was intrigued from the start from the looks of this comet to the sounds the atmosphere on it makes. I love comet 67P!!!
What incredible footage they've captured here. I love how far astronomy has progressed, all these incredible pictures of comets, nebula etc. The one I'm still desperate to see is the Event Horizon picture of our Super Massive Black Hole Sagittarius A which should be finished this year, I wonder how close the reality is to what was shown in 'Interstellar'.
Great videos. I'm a layman when it comes to space.It's amazing to think that I know more about the universe than the top astronomers from thirty years ago. Keep posting!
Dear Astrum. Thank you for the video. Very nicely presented. From my observation, 67P indicates that the "dirty snowball" hypothesis for comets is not reasonable. The neck of the nucleus appears to have been excavated. But by what? My understanding is that as the comet passes through the electric field of the solar wind, it becomes electrically charged. Sensors have detected this field. As the field varies by distance and location in the heliosphere, there is a change in electrical potential. Electro-cavitation and electro-chemistry would be occurring continuously, explaining the "outgassing". However, it is not reasonable to call the jets and plumes outgassing. The velocity of the particle streams is too slow. Rather, the particle velocity indicates that they are drawn away electrostatically. Also, the behaviour of the jet streams is evidence that the particles are kept in well defined filaments that remain visible for 100s of thousands of kilometers, by electric and magnetic currents in the tail, also measured. The jets too, appear to be derived from spiky outcrops, rather than "nozzles" on the surface, further evidence of electrical cavitation discharges. The intensity of the comet activity is enigmatic for solar heating but perfectly reasonable for electro-effects particularly when it's distance is far from the Sun.
Wrong. The dirty snowball was given up on long ago. It was a press thing. We have known for some time that the dust:ice ratio is >1. Still plenty of ice though. And there is nothing that could excavate the neck. And please don't say anything about electrical woo!
@@bobsmith231 I remember the head of ESA's 67P project espousing the "dirty snowball" idea. It was what ESA expected to find. There is water ice on 67P but the comet is primarily rock. And why should the science community be silenced about "electrical woo"? Isn't science supposed to be open to all ideas and propositions? After all the evidence that the ESA 67P project collected, there is so much that is "unexplained". Perhaps because it doesn't fit the standard model for comets. Maybe time to include consideration of electrical effects in the cosmos?
I think it would have been way cool if the Rosetta-Philae probe harpooned 67P and then was flung around while this comet rotated. This would've conserved a great deal of energy as this streamed data back to Earth. I hate that scientists think nothing better than to slam these sophisticated devices against a surface when they exhausted their purpose. Seems a helluva waste in my opinion. Excellent presention, Astrum! We want to see more, sir.
Well done I just watched the Rosetta comet landing program on national geographic and it ended without any info of if the craft had landed or not - your video finished off the info for me - much thanks
Absolutely fascinating video coupled with highly informative data and conclusions. THIS is among the best of what the Internet and RUclips, specifically, has to offer. Keep it up - taking hard science to the people.
The comet Lovejoy pic was quite stunning! Yes, very lucky indeed in the Southern hemisphere to have seen that, along with our neighboring dwarf galaxies they always get to see.
We are living in a world where these findings are open and available, yet hidden from the general populations. It's kinda sad that most people are more interested in more trivial things. These are truly remarkable findings and my respect to all scientists.
_"yet hidden from the general populations."_ Not really. Much of it is published as open access. Even a number of paywalled papers are available through arXiv. Conference proceedings are freely available. If you are interested enough you'll find it.
Dude. I am so glad I found this. I had just seen the Rosetta mission mentioned somewhere and noticed I didn't know too much about it and wanted to change that. This video was exactly what I was looking for and answered all the questions I had. Great narration, great editing, great script (as in the order in which you presented the facts..u know?). I can't really find the words to express how much I liked this :D Thank you so much!
There is a lot more on 67P as ESA photo's reveal. In the Imhotep region there is a mining operation going on. Hard to believe ? take a look, 67P has more to offer than pretty pictures.
I'm not a specialist, but I think both gas and dust tails are blown away by the Sun. Dust has much more mass per unit area, so it is not getting kicked out of the comet's orbit as much.
There is definitely some interact between solar wind and the dust tail, but not so much. In fact, a comet can have both tails go in completely different directions! www.universetoday.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/Catalina-Nov22-Chris-SchurCROP.jpg
@@astrumspace Hm. To me it looks like this photo could as well have been taken from the space between tails, so they are not necesserily placed at >90° angle.
One of the good things about being old is that I got to see Halley's Comet the last time it came round in 1986. Of course the young might get a chance to see it again in 2061. But I can definitely attest that pictures do not do it justice at all. I went outside the town I live in to see it without any lights disturbing, and it stretched pretty much halfway from horizon to horizon, dominating the night sky. It was clearly visible even during the day.
Thank you so much for your videos. I’m a space nerd but love watching your videos cause I always learn new things I didn’t know. Keep up the good work.
Many strange things here and if it is a comet, it seems as if someone has been in place and built things on it. Absolutely amazing but very very interesting ones. We are not cheated - we are fascinated! Really good presentation Jimmy !!
It's crazy to think that in the 70s we sent probs out to see the plants. Now we send them out to see comets. It's just amazing how far we have come now.
Awesome....this is amazing video, and love the way that the probes helped with the understanding of the comet....I really enjoyed this...I just wish I could afford the Astrum's Brilliant subscription and learning about the universe and other related facts....but i am on a limited budget and unable to afford this wonderful opportunity to do so....HIGH 5 to all though for putting this all together....awesome.
This was a great video thank you so much for posting it. I have followed this spacecraft for some time now and this is the most complete and well demonstrated explanation of its findings great job and keep it up
@Greg Moonen can't remember the exact model of my telescope but I use a Meade telescope. Unfortunately I don't know where my aux cord is for my autostar location but I am learning how to identify the planets better over time.
re 10:50 Actually, what this sound _really_ is, is the Normandy SR-2 scanning for Eezo on the comet surface. DAMNIT!! Now I made myself want to play the Mass Effect series all over again, starting right from the beginning...
@@astrumspace Isn't it? I mean, I share in the frustration of the community, in that we feel that the production team lied to us about the ME3 endings. They specifically said that it wouldn't boil down to 2 or 3 choices and then they boiled it down to 3 choices. So I kinda feel that we were cheated out of a potentially immensely rich narrative ending, but because of how rich and compelling the narrative is leading up to the endings, the game is just endlessly replayable. Ps: Before you start ME3, watch this video. It's a tribute song by an artist called Malukah and it's the best way I've found to inspire yourself to keep going... ruclips.net/video/re32xnyYP3A/видео.html
Enjoy the timelapses? After making the first few, I had to keep making more! I found them breathtaking, it feels like you are there when you can appreicate depth and perspective from the movement of the sequence.
Also I'm curious to know your thoughts about the CGI sticker in the corner during the CGI sequences? I wanted to create a easy way for the viewer to know if something is CGI or not, if the sticker is not there then you know you are looking at a real images. In the past I have just had a subtle "Illustration" text in the top corner but I guess too many viewers missed that.
Thanks for all your support!
The ,,CGI" corner is helpful, you might consider another abbreviation for real images (RI for real images, RIT for real image timelapse or something like that)
Thank you for all your work, videos, your curiosity and everything else :) I've got the feeling that your narrating voice improves, it sounds more secure/firm
The CGI headsup is really nice. I like it when I am told something is an artist impression, some people have a hard time distinguishing it.
I say keep the CGI stickrr, it's convenient to know whether something is CGI or not
I noticed it right away and think it's a very good idea!
Ur videos are just enchanting.....🤩
This channel deserves to have so much more attention
I agree with your closing statement that "Space exploration is getting exciting!". As a 62 year old, it all began shortly after I was born, so to see how far we've come in those years is especially amazing to me. I've always been an avid reader of science fiction, even as a very young person. It seems that much of that old fiction is becoming science fact!
Thanks for covering this, my university was apart of this project and I actually sat on a couple of meetings in a room named after Rosetta. I read about the project and was really fascinated, and it gets even better when you release a video about it.
This is such a high quality upload. You have put together and narrated some of the most amazing space images I have ever seen. I remember seeing the low resolution images of this comet when the mission was in the news. For you to put together and show the later higher resolution pictures and time lapse is fantastic in conjunction with your commentary. I can tell you put a lot of work into this and I really appreciate it. A gem of a video in a sea of shite that is RUclips. Thank you.
I couldn't say better, obviously a lot of work has been put into this. Highly appreciated content. Great quality, stunning pictures, very captivating narration! Don't stop making these awesome video!
RUclips certainly has turned into a river of shite!!
Dont overly agree. Superb video, yes. But there is also a lot of other excellent material on RUclips. However for some reason, I find such relatively easy to find.
It give one practice in sorting pearls from poop
We are known by our choices
This must be one of the most exciting and informative videos about the ESA mission to comet 67P. Great work!
...to include a pronunciation, double thanks!
Indeed!
Hail traveler, thank You for a great upload!! I find the electric comet hypothesis very appealing. Maybe you will too? Best wishes
There is no 67P material shown !?? Explain . -George
Yes
Amazing. I don't have words to express the awe.
Isn't it extremely sad that these kinds of missions aren't front and center with all news outlets around the world? Instead we get to hear from lying politicians, about every horrible crime in our city and the terrible things happening around the world. This nearly brought me to tears in a few places when I'd try to comprehend what I'm actually looking at. HUMANS LANDED A CRAFT ON A FUCKING COMET - that is absolutely amazing and shouldn't be brushed off like it is.
This mission was fairly well covered back in the day when it happened
This is possibly your most magnificent episode yet! I've said before that your videos seems to contain content that I've never seen anywhere else, but this one is extraordinary - definitely one to download and view multiple times with the pause button.
remember seeing halleys when I was a kid... missed all the others. Glad to finally see one up close
Thanks!
HOOORAYYY
Awesome vid! The night-side dust shots were staggering!
I remember when I subscribed back when you only had a few thousand subscribers! I remember saying . . . "These are really well made! I see a lot of potential for this channel in the near future!" Wow! It sure has! These really are awesome! Thank you so much for these videos! I'm proud of you! Great job!
Subscribing to your channel a few months back was one of the best decisions.
Your videos are very informative and you have good visuals as well. Keep it up.
Very very good indeed matey... Thanks.
Absolutely stunning footage, montage, processing, presentation and explanation.
Thank you!
I couldn't have said it better my self Thanks
This footage is spectacular.
I only found your channel tonight and I’ve been up watching your videos, they’re so amazing and I can’t stop watching your videos, please never stop what you love to do
When I found this channel I stayed up till the early hours watching every single video. So good.
If you are going to love this stuff , it's better to know the truth about 67p.
Google the hip bone of a human and come back and look at 67p.
All asteroids are the biological identities of gigantic creatures.
As told in biblical accounts , there was a huge war in heaven and destroyed many .
Allbthe organic compounds mentioned in this video that's ssid to be on the commet are in your body's composition because it was once a living creature thatbwas destroyed by this great war.
We are being lied to about the big history of this world and beyond.
If a part of these body patrs ever makes it to earth , DNA test will prove it was human mitochondrial DNA in a living stated.
same here
@@NOTTHASAME nice story tho!
The best source of a mission summary regarding 67p w/ Rosetta-Philae! This was very good!
This channel blows me away every time.
So much food for thought in this short video, one of your best! Thank you so much!
Awsome video I can’t wait till missions like this are taking place daily. What a great time to be alive! Thank you
Here’s a fun question for you... both the comet/asteroid missions have found precursors to life. What does that really mean? Is there really life everywhere it can flourish? Were these comets or asteroids from a planet that had life before us in our solar system (that was subsequently destroyed in a cataclysm)?
Lotta new info here. A few years ago i thought about moving there. But after this video explaining those stress fractures at the 2 lobes junction, I'm rethinking my plans.
Wise decision!
I am impressed with the all the visual information and science data you've managed to culminate into lovely presentation. Thank you.
Love the time lapse footage.. love the way the shadows move across the surface, and the clarity of the images..
great information as well..
Thank you
I remember when this mission got to the comet and sent back all sorts of fascinating information about it. And it was less than a year before New Horizons got to Pluto and sent back all of the photos and data from there. We need some more missions like this, either from NASA or the ESA.
I'm glad YT's algorithm showed me your channel a week or two ago.
Your videos are very impressive.
Awesome release, I totally enjoyed every second of this video,... Thanks again, Astrum.
Alien are we ready for your ppl to show themselves
Absolutely stunning. Love the time lapses!
Been following this channel for a month or two now. And yeah, you have got yourself a Patreon!:) Awesome channel!
Great work Alex.....the best presentation on 67P I've ever seen....keep up your fantastic work..
I've been *hyped* about seeing this video, and _man,_ you delivered! It's beautiful, Alex. Just beautiful. ❤💫
If people only realized how much they miss when paying attention to looking down instead of looking up....Hard to talk about it in a conversation cause you just get "that look" The video is excellent!
Alex, your mention of previously unknown cometary organic compounds evoked a memory of Fred Hoyle’s book The Intelligent Universe, where the author postulates the idea of cosmic panspermia. While I won’t debate any actual of perceived merits or faults of his hypothesis, it is interesting to note that many of his theories are now woven into the discussion of the impact (no pun intended) that comets may have played in the origin of life on Earth, and by inference, anywhere.
Your presentations are alway “must watch”! Thank you!
Sadly no life detecting equipment on this mission to prove it either way, could have been interesting though!
“Space exploration is getting exciting.” Thanks to channels like this one. I didn’t foresee this when I started watching RUclips. I’m not a physicist or scientist. I love space videos. Thank you
Space is such an interesting place. I found out about this comet from my book. I was intrigued from the start from the looks of this comet to the sounds the atmosphere on it makes. I love comet 67P!!!
Alex, when i watch your videos, my faith in humanity is restored. Thank you.
Bests explanation ever by any youtube channel. You showed the original clips and videos and its so nice.
Wow... That timelapse of the dust partcles and the starry background blew my mind
What incredible footage they've captured here. I love how far astronomy has progressed, all these incredible pictures of comets, nebula etc. The one I'm still desperate to see is the Event Horizon picture of our Super Massive Black Hole Sagittarius A which should be finished this year, I wonder how close the reality is to what was shown in 'Interstellar'.
6889u
Great videos. I'm a layman when it comes to space.It's amazing to think that I know more about the universe
than the top astronomers from thirty years ago. Keep posting!
Awesome, beautiful work.
That was so cool! Man you always bring the heat when it comes to the cosmos and the exploration of the cosmos. Thank you brotha
Dear Astrum. Thank you for the video. Very nicely presented.
From my observation, 67P indicates that the "dirty snowball" hypothesis for comets is not reasonable.
The neck of the nucleus appears to have been excavated. But by what?
My understanding is that as the comet passes through the electric field of the solar wind, it becomes electrically charged. Sensors have detected this field. As the field varies by distance and location in the heliosphere, there is a change in electrical potential. Electro-cavitation and electro-chemistry would be occurring continuously, explaining the "outgassing".
However, it is not reasonable to call the jets and plumes outgassing. The velocity of the particle streams is too slow. Rather, the particle velocity indicates that they are drawn away electrostatically. Also, the behaviour of the jet streams is evidence that the particles are kept in well defined filaments that remain visible for 100s of thousands of kilometers, by electric and magnetic currents in the tail, also measured. The jets too, appear to be derived from spiky outcrops, rather than "nozzles" on the surface, further evidence of electrical cavitation discharges.
The intensity of the comet activity is enigmatic for solar heating but perfectly reasonable for electro-effects particularly when it's distance is far from the Sun.
Wrong. The dirty snowball was given up on long ago. It was a press thing. We have known for some time that the dust:ice ratio is >1. Still plenty of ice though. And there is nothing that could excavate the neck. And please don't say anything about electrical woo!
@@bobsmith231 I remember the head of ESA's 67P project espousing the "dirty snowball" idea. It was what ESA expected to find. There is water ice on 67P but the comet is primarily rock.
And why should the science community be silenced about "electrical woo"? Isn't science supposed to be open to all ideas and propositions? After all the evidence that the ESA 67P project collected, there is so much that is "unexplained". Perhaps because it doesn't fit the standard model for comets. Maybe time to include consideration of electrical effects in the cosmos?
Alex, this is definitely one of my favorite RUclips channels! Thank you, my man.
I truly love your channel. Thank you so much for your work!
I learned so much from this video, thank you! Those time lapses are absolutely beautiful. Fantastic work.
I think it would have been way cool if the Rosetta-Philae probe harpooned 67P and then was flung around while this comet rotated. This would've conserved a great deal of energy as this streamed data back to Earth. I hate that scientists think nothing better than to slam these sophisticated devices against a surface when they exhausted their purpose. Seems a helluva waste in my opinion. Excellent presention, Astrum! We want to see more, sir.
Beautifully presented, as usual. Thank you!
Your voice is so wonderful to listen to, and the videos you make is full of top nice info to us space-nerds.
This is a beautiful video. Thank you for making it so well and providing the public with details we cannot find elsewhere.
I'm always so excited for your videos! One of the best space channels ever to have existed!!! Thank you so much, sir! Please never stop.
I really enjoyed this video of yours. I'd love to see more of these specific in depth mission summaries.
I remember following this when it happened. It was an amazing experience watching this unfold before our eyes.
Great work Astrum
I love this channel it’s perfection the quality of the information and detail you put into this channel is awe inspiring
Well done I just watched the Rosetta comet landing program on national geographic and it ended without any info of if the craft had landed or not - your video finished off the info for me - much thanks
amazing video
amazing video, well done.
...great, as always...so many things i didnt know about this mission...thank you.
Absolutely fascinating video coupled with highly informative data and conclusions. THIS is among the best of what the Internet and RUclips, specifically, has to offer. Keep it up - taking hard science to the people.
The comet Lovejoy pic was quite stunning! Yes, very lucky indeed in the Southern hemisphere to have seen that, along with our neighboring dwarf galaxies they always get to see.
Very impressive! Good job. Am I the only one who thought for a few seconds that I was looking at Ultima Thule...?
Great as usual!
Very well done! Thanks
We are living in a world where these findings are open and available, yet hidden from the general populations.
It's kinda sad that most people are more interested in more trivial things. These are truly remarkable findings and my respect to all scientists.
_"yet hidden from the general populations."_
Not really. Much of it is published as open access. Even a number of paywalled papers are available through arXiv. Conference proceedings are freely available. If you are interested enough you'll find it.
Dude. I am so glad I found this. I had just seen the Rosetta mission mentioned somewhere and noticed I didn't know too much about it and wanted to change that. This video was exactly what I was looking for and answered all the questions I had. Great narration, great editing, great script (as in the order in which you presented the facts..u know?). I can't really find the words to express how much I liked this :D Thank you so much!
best video ive seen that explains these kinds of phenomena...very informative thank you.
another Job- Well Done!
There is a lot more on 67P as ESA photo's reveal. In the Imhotep region there is a mining operation going on. Hard to believe ? take a look, 67P has more to offer than pretty pictures.
Thumbs up for warning about strobe effect.
omg thanks for uploading! i was waiting for it since so long
I'm not a specialist, but I think both gas and dust tails are blown away by the Sun. Dust has much more mass per unit area, so it is not getting kicked out of the comet's orbit as much.
There is definitely some interact between solar wind and the dust tail, but not so much. In fact, a comet can have both tails go in completely different directions! www.universetoday.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/Catalina-Nov22-Chris-SchurCROP.jpg
@@astrumspace Hm. To me it looks like this photo could as well have been taken from the space between tails, so they are not necesserily placed at >90° angle.
One of the good things about being old is that I got to see Halley's Comet the last time it came round in 1986. Of course the young might get a chance to see it again in 2061. But I can definitely attest that pictures do not do it justice at all. I went outside the town I live in to see it without any lights disturbing, and it stretched pretty much halfway from horizon to horizon, dominating the night sky. It was clearly visible even during the day.
Nicely done.
I always wait every Saturday to watch your amazing videos.
Really informative!! Fantastic work Alex.
Best info here, always!
Thank you so much for your videos. I’m a space nerd but love watching your videos cause I always learn new things I didn’t know. Keep up the good work.
Many strange things here and if it is a comet, it seems as if someone has been in place and built things on it. Absolutely amazing but very very interesting ones. We are not cheated - we are fascinated! Really good presentation Jimmy !!
Very impressive! Good job.
My go-to astronomy channel - thanks for the high-quality presentations! 🔭
Great content!
Thank you for this information !
great show
It's crazy to think that in the 70s we sent probs out to see the plants. Now we send them out to see comets. It's just amazing how far we have come now.
We sent a whole fleet to Halley in 1986!
@@bobsmith231 never heard about those. I'll need to look that up.
@@buckroger6456 Yep. ESA sent one, called Giotto. The Russians sent two, called Vega 1 & 2. The Japanese sent a couple. And one from the US.
Commenting to boost engagement! Love your stuff.
Tnx astrum , best informative and most detailed videos of space exploration.. thumbs up bro.. good works..
Awesome....this is amazing video, and love the way that the probes helped with the understanding of the comet....I really enjoyed this...I just wish I could afford the Astrum's Brilliant subscription and learning about the universe and other related facts....but i am on a limited budget and unable to afford this wonderful opportunity to do so....HIGH 5 to all though for putting this all together....awesome.
Some of Brilliant's stuff is free just FYI :)
I really love your videos
super-cool and informative video! Loved it.
thank for this wonderfully detailed insight!!!!!
This was a great video thank you so much for posting it. I have followed this spacecraft for some time now and this is the most complete and well demonstrated explanation of its findings great job and keep it up
thanks Alex, I hadn't seen a lot of these images yet!
Your videos are informative and entertaining. Thank you
Thank you
If you haven't played an Astrum video in your headphones while stargazing, you haven't lived
Thx!
When the summer weather comes back, I'll have to try that. Sounds very relaxing.
@Greg Moonen If you don't mind me asking, what kind of telescope do you have?
@Greg Moonen can't remember the exact model of my telescope but I use a Meade telescope. Unfortunately I don't know where my aux cord is for my autostar location but I am learning how to identify the planets better over time.
What is water ice?
re 10:50
Actually, what this sound _really_ is, is the Normandy SR-2 scanning for Eezo on the comet surface.
DAMNIT!! Now I made myself want to play the Mass Effect series all over again, starting right from the beginning...
I just started again last week, what a cracking trilogy 😁
@@astrumspace
Isn't it? I mean, I share in the frustration of the community, in that we feel that the production team lied to us about the ME3 endings. They specifically said that it wouldn't boil down to 2 or 3 choices and then they boiled it down to 3 choices.
So I kinda feel that we were cheated out of a potentially immensely rich narrative ending, but because of how rich and compelling the narrative is leading up to the endings, the game is just endlessly replayable.
Ps: Before you start ME3, watch this video. It's a tribute song by an artist called Malukah and it's the best way I've found to inspire yourself to keep going...
ruclips.net/video/re32xnyYP3A/видео.html
All I can say is wow.